Michael Barber

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Michael Barber has become a leading player in market-based education reform around the world.

Fortune described him as perhaps 'the single most influential educator on the face of the earth'.[1]

Barber is Chief Education Advisor to education company, Pearson; and Managing Partner of Delivery Associates, a consultancy firm that claims to be 'global Leaders in public sector strategy and implementation'[2]

Pearson

Barber joined education giant, Pearson as Chief Education Advisor in September 2011. He leads Pearson’s worldwide programme of 'efficacy' and research, advising on and supporting the development of products and services that build on the research findings. He also plays a particular role in Pearson’s strategy for education in the developing world, and was Chairman of the Pearson Affordable Learning Fund (see Pearson for more on the Fund).[3]

McKinsey

Prior to Pearson, Barber was a Partner at McKinsey & Company and Head of McKinsey’s global education practice. During this period, he co-authored two controversial, but influential McKinsey education reports:

  • “How the world’s most improved school systems keep getting better” (2010);
  • “How the world’s best-performing schools come out on top” (2007).

Advisor to Tony Blair

Barber previously served the UK government as Head of Tony Blair’s Delivery Unit (from 2001-2005) and as Chief Adviser to the Secretary of State for Education on School Standards (from 1997-2001).

Early career

Before joining government he was a Professor at the Institute of Education at the University of London.

Publications

  • “How the world’s most improved school systems keep getting better” (2010); McKinsey & Company
  • “How the world’s best-performing schools come out on top” (2007). McKinsey & Company
  • The Good News from Pakistan (2013), with Reform, on the major school reform in Punjab, Pakistan.
  • An Avalanche is coming (2013), on the future of education in universities
  • Oceans of Innovation (2012), on the future of education in schools
  • Deliverology 101
  • Instruction to Deliver
  • The Learning Game: Arguments for an Education Revolution
  • How to do the Impossible: a Guide for Politicians with a Passion for Education
  • The Making of the 1944 Education Act.


References

  1. Jennifer Reingold, Everybody hates Pearson, Fortune, 21 January 2015
  2. Delivery Associates website, accessed August 2015
  3. Barber Bio, Pearson website, accessed August 2015