Military Cadets 'Could Be Drafted In To Boost Discipline At Secondary Schools'

Military Cadets 'Could Boost Discipline At Schools' Gove Says

Military-style cadet forces could be introduced to all secondary schools in a government bid to boost standards and discipline, Michael Gove has announced.

The education secretary told the Sunday Express the proposed policy was a result of a meeting with a cadet at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, who told him of the advantages the groups can bring.

Gove told the Sunday Express: "I met this amazing guy, a 17-year-old an Afro-Caribbean lad, who joined the cadet force and told me how it had transformed his life.

"He was the perfect advertisement for what it can do.

"I've tasked the children's minister to work with Nick Harvey at the Ministry of Defence to bring this to all schools and they are very keen to roll it out."

Following the conversation, Gove told children's minister Sarah Teather to work with defence minister Nick Harvey on the project.

Schools Commissioner Dr Elizabeth Sidwell also backed the idea of the Combined Cadet Force (CCF) in an interview with The Sunday Telegraph.

The CCF includes wings linked to the army, Royal Air Force and navy and is made up of youngsters aged 13 to 18.

It uses military orientated training to build self-reliance, resourcefulness, endurance and a sense of service to the community.

There are CCF units in more 200 independent schools and around 60 state schools but Dr Sidwell said they are "not the province of the middle classes, it's the province of every child".

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