img src="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45527000/jpg/_45527101_boyonlaptop226.jpg" align="left" width="226" height="170" alt="Boy using laptop" border="0" vspace="4" hspace="4"p class="first"bThe popularity of information and communication technology is declining rapidly despite the importance of the subject to adult life, a report says./bpIn 2007 there were 45% fewer girls taking A-levels in the subject than in 2004, and almost a third fewer boys.pTeaching in some schools is lagging behind and many pupils are taking qualifications of "doubtful value", school inspectors Ofsted said.pThe schools' minister said the report showed "good progress" was being made.pOfsted's report reveals that more and more pupils are taking vocational qualifications at key stage 4 (age 16) than GCSEs.pSuch qualifications are worth four GCSEs, but Ofsted says they "offer limited challenge".pIt describes the situation as "serious" because it leads to fewer pupils studying ICT in the sixth-form, despite its increasing importance to our adult working lives.pAnd the falling numbers of pupils sitting national qualifications troubles inspectors because many expressed enthusiasm for the subject, they say.pThe proportion of pupils taking double award GCSE or the shorter GCSE has fallen by a third since 2004, according to the report.pp /quot;iICT needs to be given high status, both by the government and in individual schools, in line with its importance to young people's future economic well-beingquot;/ibr /bChristine Gilbert, chief inspector of schools/bbr /br /And the proportion of girls studying computing after the age of 16 has fallen to an all-time low, Ofsted added.pIn 2007, there were 13,360 A-level exam entries - 1.7% of the total.pAnd A-level results are poor in comparison to other subjects.pb'Not being challenged'/bp"The Key Stage 4 curriculum was inadequate in around one-fifth of the schools visited; assessment was unsatisfactory in a similar proportion, and many students were following qualifications of doubtful value," Ofsted's report notes.pSchools should evaluate to what extent these qualifications are challenging pupils, it says.pChief inspector of schools Christine Gilbert said schools must equip pupils effectively with ICT skills.p"ICT needs to be given high status, both by the government and in individual schools, in line with its importance to young people's future economic well-being," she said.pThe Ofsted report was based on evidence gathered from inspections of information and communication technology in 177 maintained schools in England and some additional visits to schools where practice was identified as good.pIt tracked schools' performance in the subject between 2004 and 2007 and found steady improvements, particularly towards the end of the evaluation.pBut achievement remained "stubbornly low" in some schools.pHigher-attaining pupils were not always being stretched, Ofsted added.pIn the weakest providers, links between ICT and other subjects were not made, but in the best, ICT resources were spread across the teaching of all subjects - and not merely available in a computer room.pSchools Minister Jim Knight said he was "pleased the report recognised that most schools were making good progress in ICT".pHe added that he wanted primary pupils to learn ICT skills early so that by secondary school, they could "concentrate on using them in an engaging and exciting way".ppppppphrpThis article is from the a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk"BBC News website/a. #169; British Broadcasting Corporation/pdiv class="feedflare"
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