Category: Meena Kumari Wood

  • ESB International responds to Curriculum and Assessment Review

    ESB International responds to Curriculum and Assessment Review

    ESB International responds to Curriculum and Assessment Review

  • National Momentum Builds for Oracy as The Guardian and Patrons of ESB International join Coalition Calling for Government Action 

    Education, equality and industry leaders unite to remind government of its oracy pledge.

    English Speaking Board (International) Ltd.’s (ESB International) patrons, Meena Kumari Wood and Dr Kush Kanodia, have joined the growing calls urging Prime Minister Keir Starmer to honour Labour’s 2023 pledge to embed oracy in the national curriculum.

    ESB International Patron:
    Meena Kumari Wood
    ESB International Patron:
    Dr Kush Kanodia

    Their voices add weight to a powerful open letter signed by Tina Renshaw CEO of ESB International along with 60 other Oracy champions, including children’s author Michael Rosen and former education secretaries Charles Clarke and Estelle Morris, calling on the new government to prioritise speaking and listening skills as a core educational entitlement. The letter, organised by Voice 21, frames oracy as the “fourth R” in education—alongside reading, writing and arithmetic—and urges the Labour government to deliver on its commitment to ensure every child develops strong communication skills to thrive in a world shaped by artificial intelligence, inequality and rapid social change. Their voices add weight to a powerful open letter signed by 60 leading figures, including children’s author Michael Rosen and former education secretaries Charles Clarke and Estelle Morris, calling on the new government to prioritise speaking and listening skills as a core educational entitlement.

    A screenshot of Meena Wood's LinkedIn post

    The campaign for oracy has also received significant backing from The Guardian, which published a leader editorial on July 27 describing oracy education as a “low-cost, high-return” policy and stating that the new government “should seize the moment.” The editorial supports the open letter’s message and affirms that teaching young people to express themselves confidently and coherently is essential to a democratic society.

    In a separate column, Guardian journalist Simon Jenkins went further, writing that schools are “failing a generation” by neglecting public speaking. He describes oracy as “the very foundation of human interaction,” warning that an education system without structured speaking and debating leaves young people at a disadvantage not just in work, but in life. The founders of ESB International, Christabel Burniston MBE and Jocelyn Bell in 1953, identified that the power of human connection was central to their ideas about Oracy and the assessment of it. Their intention was to focus Oracy education on the interactivity of communication and the personal development it creates. That sense of personal agency and the development and enabling of authentic skilled voices continue s at the core of ESB International’s work today. 

    “A no brainer in 2025”

    Meena Kumari Wood, an educational consultant, trainer, author, Honorary Fellow in Educational Leadership (Univ. Birmingham), Board Member of Chartered College of Teaching and former HMI (Ofsted), Principal (Secondary), Academy Principal (Adult College) and LA Education Adviser, has described the omission of oracy from the government’s interim curriculum review as deeply concerning: 

    Not to champion the cause of integrating speaking and listening skills—self-expression—into the school curriculum is a complete no-brainer in 2025.

    Many young people demonstrate a lack of confidence in self-expression, possess a limited vocabulary, and struggle with face-to-face conversations—especially in difficult or professional contexts. Almost half of young people surveyed by CIPD in 2024 said they were never taught these essential skills at school.

    “Oracy is currency for life”

    ESB International’s Chief Executive, Tina Renshaw, a signatory of the open letter, has echoed Meena’s concerns and highlighted the practical contribution that ESB International’s unique qualifications can make to oracy education and on the employability skills of young people.

    ESB International CEO, Tina Renshaw

    As a vocational awarding organisation, ESB International recognises the valuable currency of oracy for life, work and study. Our most popular qualification among secondary schools is Speech for Employability, which builds confidence and competence in teamwork, business analysis, interview skills, and entrepreneurship. Oracy is not an optional extra, it is a foundation for success—and every child deserves access to it.

    “Will Labour Deliver?”

    Dr Kush Kanodia, an influential disability rights campaigner and social entrepreneur, emphasised that Labour’s promise to make oracy a central educational priority cannot be allowed to fade into the background:

    Will Keir Starmer honour the Labour Party pledge by embedding teaching oracy in the educational curriculum? This moment represents a once-in-a-generation opportunity to create a fairer, more inclusive system that empowers every child with the skills needed for life and work.


    Turning Promises into Policy

    The Oracy Education Commission recently described oracy as “a foundational building block” and warned that, in an age increasingly shaped by automation, communication skills are more valuable than ever. 

    As the full report of the government’s curriculum and assessment review approaches, ESB International fully endorses the words of the open letter: “We urge you to turn that promise into lasting change.”  

  • ESB welcomes author Meena Kumari Wood as its new Patron

    Headshot of Meena Kumari Wood
    Meena Kumari Wood

    English Speaking Board (International) Ltd. (ESB) Is delighted to announce that author Meena Kumari Wood has agreed to become a Patron of the organisation. 

    The news comes as ESB, an award-winning Awarding Organisation with over 70 years of expertise in offering Oracy and English Language qualifications, looks to expand on the number and diversity of its Patrons. Meena joins as a Patron in the year that the organisation was named as Awarding Organisation of the Year, by the Federation of Awarding Bodies. The award recognised and applauded that as a not-for-profit business, ESB also promotes a thriving Outreach Programme which helps learners facing disadvantage.   

    Consultant, trainer, author, Honorary Fellow in Educational Leadership (Univ. Birmingham), Board Member of Chartered College of Teaching and former HMI (Ofsted), Principal Secondary Academy Principal Adult College and LA Education Adviser, Meena is passionate for ALL young people to succeed in education. She is author of the inspirational book, “Secondary Curriculum Transformed: Enabling All to Achieve”, which highlights the excellent work that ESB does.

    ESB’s CEO Tina Renshaw, says:

    We are delighted that Meena is joining ESB as our Patron. We have been endeavouring to find new patrons to better represent the reach of our many accredited qualifications that we offer. I hope our new Patrons will help to raise our profile and assist us with our philanthropic and fund-raising to support and grow our Outreach Programme. 

    “With her educational and literary background, Meena will particularly focus on our Oracy work with schools, colleges and third sector organisations. This has become even more relevant with the new Labour Government pledging to prioritise Oracy as a crucial part of a child’s education and to ensure that all young people have access to the opportunities they deserve. 

    “Oracy is about learning through talk and learning to talk. The power of spoken language is transformative and larger than developing communicative competence and access to knowledge.  

    “In addition to Oracy as ‘learning through talk’ there is transformative power in applying speaking and listening to real-life situations and simulated experiences. ESB’s accredited assessments provide such experiences. We give learners communication-rich opportunities and a platform on which their voice and their passions are not only heard but valued, delivering confidence and agency.  

    “Meena will help ESB establish itself as a thought leader, with our unique contribution of offering accredited qualifications in the Oracy space in government-funded primary, secondary and post 16 education and in the independent sector. I look forward to her getting involved with our centres to see first-hand their challenges and achievements that they encounter with their ESB learners’ oracy journeys”. 

    Says Meena:

    It is an honour to be a Patron of ESB and I greatly value this opportunity to champion its sterling work. I strongly believe that structured learning for all children and young people to develop their oracy skills should be embedded across the curriculum. These form the foundations for strong reading and writing skills and lead to an inclusive curriculum. 

    In her enlightening book, “Secondary Curriculum Transformed: Enabling All to Achieve”, Meena says: “It is clear that disadvantaged children are the ones most in need of public speaking skills, especially those from homes, where there is not much talk. As we have seen in a world where entrepreneurial skills and communication skills are paramount, all our students must have the confidence and the ability to articulate their opinions; these are attributes that last a lifetime.”  

    Connecting this thought to what ESB offers, she adds: “The ‘Connect, Inform, Perform and Employability’ Pathways in ESB assessments contain specific oracy skills for each context. ‘Connect’ allows students to develop their literacy and analytical skills, through a biographical talk, a chosen poem or drama piece and includes being able to respond to audience questions. ‘Inform’ can be focused on a KS3 topic in any subject. Students may give a personal interest talk, review a news piece and give a persuasive speech, within a political, economic, environmental or social context. ‘Perform’ allows students to unlock their creativity through the performance of a self-composition or performance of an established work. ‘Employability’ supports those who wish to deepen their understanding of a career and to prepare for the job market”.  

    Tina adds:

    Meena joins our other new Patron Disability Rights and Race Equality Champion and award-winning social entrepreneur Dr Kush Kanodia. Kush’s phenomenal work in creating systematic change for the inclusion of disabled people is a perfect fit for our work in giving more learners with significant learning needs the chance to find their voice and empowering them to achieve with our ambitious and inclusive Oracy qualifications.  

    Kush was recently awarded the  Campaigner of the Year Award 2024  by the prestigious Sheila McKechnie Foundation in recognition of his significant contribution to social change through campaigning and advocacy. He has just returned from Paris to attend the Paralympics’ Blind Football Final and the Closing Ceremony, having been a Torch Bearer for the Paralympic Games in London 2012.  

    If you would like to learn more about ESB’s confidence-boosting Oracy and English language qualifications, please get in touch with a member of our Business Strategy Team at  business@esbuk.org. We would love to hear from you.