John Marks

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Professor John Marks is a British nuclear physicist, educator and author. He has written extensively on British education and has co-authored, with Caroline Cox, This Immoral Trade: Slavery in the 21st Century, and The West, Islam and Islamism: Is Ideological Islam Compatible with Liberal Democracy?[1]

Marks and Caroline Cox published a survey of school standards in 1983. They later claimed they were the subject of a smear campaign, after an official briefing questioning their methods leaked to the press.[2]

Marks was one of the founders of the Hillgate Group, which issued a 1986 pamphlet, The Reform of British Education which called for the removal of state schools from local authority control and the reintroduction of selective education. It also called for an inquiry into the Schools Inspectorate, which was criticised by Marks in an interview with The Times:

'They have failed to act as the guardians of a good system; they are the dog that didn't bark.
'What have they done about anti-racism, for instance? Now we see it exploding in Brent over the past three months, but it's been around for the past two or three years in the borough.'[3]

The New York Times credited Marks with significant influence on Conservative education policy in 1987:

it is not parents' demands that have given political shape to Conservative education policy, but lobbying by a small group of radical ideologists on the right of the party. Among the most energetic campaigners have been Lady Caroline Cox, Dr. John Marks and Prof. Roger Scruton, a philosopher-journalist of Birkbeck College, London. They have appeared wearing hats as associates of the Center for Policy Studies, the National Council for Education Standards, the Hillgate Group and the Institute of Economic Affairs, whose present education consultant, Stuart Sexton, spent six single-minded years inside the Education Department as political adviser to successive ministers.[4]

Marks published Choosing a state school in 1989, with Cox and Robert Balchin. In a review for The Independent, Professor Harvey Goldstein criticised their methodology for judging schools exam results:

The authors base these 'targets' on research that two of them carried out in the early 1980s. But their suggestions for parents fail to take account of the single most important factor in a school's results: the achievement of its pupil intake. For example, schools with relatively poor exam results may nevertheless be doing a fine job with a low achieving intake. It is the progress children make between entering and leaving school which should be measured, not merely their final results.
The procedures recommended by the authors could pass very unfair judgements upon many schools, both good and bad. Moreover, their research used only the overall average results for each school. It is now widely accepted by those working in this area that school comparisons should be based on an analysis of individual children's results. Recent work in the Inner London Education Authority has shown how misleading it can be to compare schools merely on their average results.[5]

In January 1990, Marks and Cox attended a Prague conference on 'The Future of the Right in East and Central Europe' organised by the Conservative Council of Eastern Europe. According to Richard Gott, Marks suggested that "that Czechoslovakia should be purged of Communists in the same way that Germany was de-Nazified after 1945."[6]

Baroness Cox explains how 'the moral legitimacy of British society has been undermined by Marxists in key institutions, particularly educational establishments'. Universities, schools and training colleges have all suffered, she says. The social sciences and history have been 'particulary infected'. The church, too, is suspect. 'Many of our church leaders have been infected by liberation theology'. John Marks adds that the British know well 'how much wrecking power Communist parties can have, even when small'.[7]

Affiliations

Publications

  • Relativity: A Non-Mathematical Introduction to the Classical, Special and General Theories of Relativity, Geoffrey Chapman, London, 1972.
  • Science and the Making of the Modern World, Heinemann, Oxford, 1984.
  • With Caroline Cox, The Insolence of Office, Claridge Press, 1988.
  • With Caroline Coxx and Robert Balchin, Choosing a State School, Hutchinson, 1989.
  • Fried Snowballs: Communism in Theory and Practice, Claridge Press, London, 1990.
  • The Betrayed Generations: Standards in British Schools 1950-2000, Centre for Policy Studies, London, 2001.
  • With Caroline Cox, Islam, Islamism and the West: The Divide Between Ideological Islam and Liberal Democracy, American Foreign Policy Council, Washington, 2005.
  • With Caroline Cox, This Immoral Trade: Slavery in the 21st Century, Monarch Books, Toronto, 2006.

References

  1. Identity Crisis: Can European civilization survive? - Biographies, European Freedom Alliance, accessed 7 January 2009.
  2. Douglas Broom, Grammar success 'smeared', The Times, 27 December 1988.
  3. Nicholas Wood and John Clare, Radical shift proposed for state schools / Conservative manifesto on educational change, The Times, 29 December 1986.
  4. Stuart Maclure, A Radical Proposal for English Schools, New York Times, 8 November 1987.
  5. Harvey Goldstein, Education: Misleading parents with the wrong signposts: Choosing a State School, The Independent, 23 March 2009.
  6. Richard Gott, The blue pimpernels: In the post-Communist dawn, Mrs Thatcher's ideologues slip into Prague to rescue East Europeans from the tyranny of old philosophies. But Richard Gott finds a guarded response to the glories of the free market, The Guardian, 15 January 1990.
  7. Richard Gott, The blue pimpernels: In the post-Communist dawn, Mrs Thatcher's ideologues slip into Prague to rescue East Europeans from the tyranny of old philosophies. But Richard Gott finds a guarded response to the glories of the free market, The Guardian, 15 January 1990.
  8. Program - Identity Crisis: Can European civilization survive?, European Freedom Alliance, accessed 5 January 2009.