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  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    isam said:

    Critics of our govt will almost certainly include care homes deaths in our figures, but won’t in other countries leading to the confirmation bias conclusion that we are the worst
    No.
    Critics of our government would say that they have shamefully neglected social care, with disastrous consequences for care home residents.
    I couldn’t give a fig about the international league tables in this respect.
  • Cookie said:

    To my surprise, I'm with TSE here. Pay teachers much more. And thereby make it more competitive to get into.
    Some teachers - like my daughter's young, enthusiastic year 3 teacher - are worth much more. Some - like my daughter's occasionally adequate year 4 teacher - aren't. I can't see any way of getting more of the former and fewer od the latter without paying them more.
    When I look back upon my life it's always with a sense of shame I know why I've done well is that my parents made sacrifices to ensure I got a top education.

    I want every child in this country to receive that without parents having to make sacrifices.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,569
    Foxy said:

    We take a mix of pre and post A level students, and graduate students too.

    Our scoring algorithm simply gives more points for an actual A level over a predicted one*. We also find that some time working in the care sector brings extra maturity to the students. They are better on our acting stations with simulated patients.

    *private schools over egg their predictions compared to state schools which tend to underestimate their brightest. This is one way to level the playing field without ruling out exceptional 6 th formers.
    I'd hazard a guess, as a grandfather who has been asked several times, that there's also tuition on personal statements.
    I wish someone had told me what Uni's wanted.
  • A source had told the Guardian: “The new guidance will say ‘this is what you do if you don’t have any gowns’. Wear an apron instead – that will be the new policy for the foreseeable future, though the medical organisations will go mad about that.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/17/nhs-staff-to-be-asked-to-treat-coronavirus-patients-without-gowns?CMP=share_btn_tw

    Yeah the government's popularity is going to take a hit.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    HYUFD said:

    According to the Sutton trust state school teachers are more likely to have BEd degrees but independent school teachers more likely to have MScs and PhDs and postgraduate qualifications in the subjects they teach.

    5% of state school teachers and 17% of independent school teachers went to Oxbridge.
    https://www.suttontrust.com/our-research/teaching-by-degrees/

    My wife has a PHD and teaches in a state primary.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536
    edited April 2020

    A source had told the Guardian: “The new guidance will say ‘this is what you do if you don’t have any gowns’. Wear an apron instead – that will be the new policy for the foreseeable future, though the medical organisations will go mad about that.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/17/nhs-staff-to-be-asked-to-treat-coronavirus-patients-without-gowns?CMP=share_btn_tw

    Yeah the government's popularity is going to take a hit.

    This is universal credit all over again. You think the government will take a hit, but most people won't notice.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,263
    Cookie said:

    To my surprise, I'm with TSE here. Pay teachers much more. And thereby make it more competitive to get into.
    Some teachers - like my daughter's young, enthusiastic year 3 teacher - are worth much more. Some - like my daughter's occasionally adequate year 4 teacher - aren't. I can't see any way of getting more of the former and fewer od the latter without paying them more.
    While pay matters, I don't think it the decisive reason that so many teachers do not stick to the profession*. Other elements might well matter more, particularly a supportive culture of respect for teachers from parents and from the hierarchy of education and government. That is not so easy to address.

    * I am sure that we all agree that poor teachers who are not improving should move on, I suspect that the good ones are as likely to quit. That sort of reflective self doubt in a professional is both a key to being an inspiring teacher, but also to that crisis of faith.

    All the best doctors that I know came close to dropping out. Indeed one of my colleagues is quite a competent roofer, having done that for a year before his mates on the site persuaded him back into medicine.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    tlg86 said:

    This is universal credit all over again. You think the government will take a hit, but most people won't notice.
    No this is the dementia tax. It feels like that anyway.
  • tlg86 said:

    This is universal credit all over again. You think the government will take a hit, but most people won't notice.
    Only because they keep on kicking the worst elements of universal credit into the long grass.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,821
    Foxy said:

    We take a mix of pre and post A level students, and graduate students too.

    Our scoring algorithm simply gives more points for an actual A level over a predicted one*. We also find that some time working in the care sector brings extra maturity to the students. They are better on our acting stations with simulated patients.

    *private schools over egg their predictions compared to state schools which tend to underestimate their brightest. This is one way to level the playing field without ruling out exceptional 6 th formers.
    Some private schools, apparently, are refusing to provide predicted grades unless parents pay the whole year's fees for schooling they aren't really getting. Which some parents are unable to do, no longer having a job or a business. It's a pickle.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536
    MaxPB said:

    No this is the dementia tax. It feels like that anyway.
    The policy where the government were going to "steal your house"?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    ydoethur said:

    That is TB confirmed.
    TSE will be badgering you for a more sett-led answer.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,263

    I'd hazard a guess, as a grandfather who has been asked several times, that there's also tuition on personal statements.
    I wish someone had told me what Uni's wanted.
    Some places take it very seriously, but in Leicester we have a policy not to read them. They are worthless and formulaic.
  • How about President of the Board of Education?

    Everyone would have to address me as Mr President.
    Who would you want to sing Happy Birthday toYou?

  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    edited April 2020
    tlg86 said:

    The policy where the government were going to "steal your house"?
    It's like sending soldiers into battle with a pocket knife. The first nurse to die because of the revised guidelines is going to be on the front page of The Sun and all over social media.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,536
    MaxPB said:

    It's like sending soldiers into battle with a pocket knife. The first nurse to die because of the revised guidelines is going to be ok the front page of The Sun and all over social media.
    But that's happening already. The Six O'Clock News had a whole section on NHS staff dying.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,852
    Cressida Dick was in the middle of Westminster Bridge during the NHS clap yesterday. What on earth was she thinking?

    https://twitter.com/johnestevens/status/1251049661265297408
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    ydoethur said:

    No. It is not a 2. It is a statement that they exist because of failings in the state system, and if you want to get rid of them it would be better to address those failings rather than to take punitive action out of personal and bluntly, ill-informed prejudice, family members notwithstanding. That is nearer to a 3 than anything else, but again, your questions are not in a Flovian sense meaningful because you do not have an understanding of the basic premises.

    But unfortunately one of the weaknesses of Labour and indeed the radical left more widely is that while they have always known what they are against they very seldom have a positive vision of what they are actually for.
    I tire of you imputing false motive to me. Please refrain.

    Now then. Let's argue properly. No distractive waffle.

    If private schools exist primarily because of state school failings, how does this square with the evidence which indicates that having adjusted for their advantaged intake, private school results are not materially better than state? That most of the kids who do well there would do just as well at a typical state school.

    If your answer to the above is that it's mainly about class sizes (which I think it will be since we have agreed this point before) then the main state school relative "failing" we are looking at is FUNDING. Funding per pupil.

    So, what should we do about that? Triple the education budget?
  • Who would you want to sing Happy Birthday toYou?

    Kimberley Walsh.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    Abolish the Department for Education, close every state school in the country, and give every parent the money in school vouchers.

    The free market will sort it out, and we'll finally have a truly world class school education system.

    Every child will be educated brilliantly.

    Abolish the target of 50% of school kids going to university, remove university status from most of the former polys.

    Abolish fees for those that study degrees in the most important subjects, such as STEM, medicine, engineering, computing based degrees, history, and law degrees.

    I am quite happy to serve as Education Secretary.

    So long as the fees are the same at every school. Cautious tick. And you're hired on probation.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,689
    Well if all those folks with pretendy companies pay all the taxes they've dodged over the years, then perhaps they might qualify for the scheme.
  • kinabalu said:

    So long as the fees are the same at every school. Cautious tick. And you're hired on probation.
    Nope, parents can top up the vouchers if they like.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    Foxy said:

    Some places take it very seriously, but in Leicester we have a policy not to read them. They are worthless and formulaic.
    Excellent.
    The angst over the production of them is significant, and unnecessary.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,553

    Who would you want to sing Happy Birthday toYou?

    Altered Images-era Clare Grogan
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    tlg86 said:

    But that's happening already. The Six O'Clock News had a whole section on NHS staff dying.
    Now the government has changed the rules to make them more likely to die. Before this it was still all under the "well it's come out of nowhere" now we're 8-10 weeks in and still haven't resolved the shortages.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,360
    Foxy said:

    While pay matters, I don't think it the decisive reason that so many teachers do not stick to the profession*. Other elements might well matter more, particularly a supportive culture of respect for teachers from parents and from the hierarchy of education and government. That is not so easy to address.

    * I am sure that we all agree that poor teachers who are not improving should move on, I suspect that the good ones are as likely to quit. That sort of reflective self doubt in a professional is both a key to being an inspiring teacher, but also to that crisis of faith.

    All the best doctors that I know came close to dropping out. Indeed one of my colleagues is quite a competent roofer, having done that for a year before his mates on the site persuaded him back into medicine.
    A better focus for improving teaching is to reduce the emphasis on the individual teacher.
    For example, it's utterly insane that many teachers are expected to source or create their own lesson materials, rather than using or adapting externally-produced ones. It's a mixture of craftsmanship (we all want to make personalised lessons) and lack of money, but it also limits how well things get taught and creates excess work which does horrible things for retention.
  • dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,307

    Well if all those folks with pretendy companies pay all the taxes they've dodged over the years, then perhaps they might qualify for the scheme.
    Like the ones in the media selling services to TV companies as presenters?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,548
    edited April 2020
    kinabalu said:

    I tire of you imputing false motive to me. Please refrain.
    You’re a fine one to talk, after the way you have been twisting my words all evening.
    kinabalu said:


    So, what should we do about that? Triple the education budget?

    Yes.

    Finally, you got it.

    In the state sector, Without checking, average pupil spend is around £4,000. In the private sector, it’s over ten.

    Abolish the imbalance and private schools will either wither, or join the state sector.

    And it would make it a whole lot easier to recruit and retain teachers.
  • dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,307

    A source had told the Guardian: “The new guidance will say ‘this is what you do if you don’t have any gowns’. Wear an apron instead – that will be the new policy for the foreseeable future, though the medical organisations will go mad about that.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/17/nhs-staff-to-be-asked-to-treat-coronavirus-patients-without-gowns?CMP=share_btn_tw

    Yeah the government's popularity is going to take a hit.

    Whilst giving the quangos and trust managers a free pass?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    dr_spyn said:

    Whilst giving the quangos and trust managers a free pass?
    Have the government not taken way the control of supply distribution from the trusts ?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    edited April 2020
    Chameleon said:

    Jesus, do you have any policies where the answer is to improve, rather than drag everyone down to about the same level?
    Yes but all that stuff - "levelling up" - is motherhood and apple pie. It's boring to talk about things everyone signs up to. It's just platitudes and waffle most of the time if you go that route.

    For example -

    We need to make state schools SO good that nobody in their right mind would fork out for private.

    No doubt everybody agrees with that. I certainly do. But it's going precisely nowhere.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733

    A better focus for improving teaching is to reduce the emphasis on the individual teacher.
    For example, it's utterly insane that many teachers are expected to source or create their own lesson materials, rather than using or adapting externally-produced ones. It's a mixture of craftsmanship (we all want to make personalised lessons) and lack of money, but it also limits how well things get taught and creates excess work which does horrible things for retention.
    There was a very good national resources website for primaries, which Gove abolished, for no reason I can discern.
  • johnoundlejohnoundle Posts: 120
    edited April 2020
    malcolmg said:

    With reference to Covid 19 no mention of course that Scotland is sparsely populated compared with England, has approx. a third of UK landmass but with only 8% of population, only one city with i million population,no major airports etc. etc.

  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,360
    kinabalu said:

    Yes but all that stuff - "levelling up" - is motherhood and apple pie. It's boring to talk about things everyone signs up to. It's just platitudes and waffle most of the time if you go that route.

    For example -

    We need to make state schools SO good that nobody in their right mind would fork out for private.

    No doubt everybody agrees with that. I certainly do. But it's going precisely nowhere.
    And anyway- in terms of competent access to teaching that will get your child the grades they deserve, there's not that much in it between state and private sectors. (Seriously. Unless your local comp is one of the small number of very worst, it's better that they spend 1 hour a day doing extra reading than spending that time travelling to and from a more distant but better school.)
    It's the other stuff- the studious classmates, the networking and so on which is much much harder to do in the context of a state comprehensive. And that problem, which is real and huge, is much harder to fix with money.
  • eristdooferistdoof Posts: 5,076
    Foxy said:

    While pay matters, I don't think it the decisive reason that so many teachers do not stick to the profession*. Other elements might well matter more, particularly a supportive culture of respect for teachers from parents and from the hierarchy of education and government. That is not so easy to address.

    * I am sure that we all agree that poor teachers who are not improving should move on, I suspect that the good ones are as likely to quit. That sort of reflective self doubt in a professional is both a key to being an inspiring teacher, but also to that crisis of faith.

    All the best doctors that I know came close to dropping out. Indeed one of my colleagues is quite a competent roofer, having done that for a year before his mates on the site persuaded him back into medicine.
    I have friends in the UK who are teachers, friends in the UK who gave up teaching, and friends in Germany who are teachers, including my girlfriend.

    All of the UK teachers I know who gave up, did so because of the crazy out of hours workload not because of the pay. Comparing the working conditions between the two countries I see two differences. Thie biggest difference is that homework is not marked by the teachers in Germany. Exams are marked by teachers, but not the standard homework.

    The other difference is the teachers in Germany are there to help the pupils learn as much as possible. They are not there to maximise the exam results. The difference might seem subtle to some outside of education, but the effect this has on job satisfaction is considerable. Once the job satisfaction gets wringed out of you that's when you leave the profession.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    ydoethur said:

    Yes.

    Finally, you got it.

    In the state sector, Without checking, average pupil spend is around £4,000. In the private sector, it’s over ten.

    Abolish the imbalance and private schools will either wither, or join the state sector.

    And it would make it a whole lot easier to recruit and retain teachers.

    I have always got that. But it is a rather banal point and furthermore there is no chance of it happening.

    Of course with magic money tree all is possible - and we are perhaps about to shake it - so maybe now is the time. :smile:
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    edited April 2020
    ydoethur said:

    Yes.

    Finally, you got it.

    In the state sector, Without checking, average pupil spend is around £4,000. In the private sector, it’s over ten.

    Abolish the imbalance and private schools will either wither, or join the state sector.

    And it would make it a whole lot easier to recruit and retain teachers.

    I have always got that. But it is a rather banal point and furthermore there is no chance of it happening.

    Of course with magic money tree all is possible - and we are perhaps about to shake it - so maybe now is the time. :smile:

    EDIT -

    Twisting words is not the same (or as bad) as imputing false motive. Not that I was twisting your words. I was merely seeking to condense.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Mortimer said:

    O/T, but thanks for your reading suggestions last night @Charles - much appreciated!

    And I agree with @Cyclefree, the Times obituary of your father was equal parts fascinating and heart-warming.
    Thank you. It was a very different time. I think our parents’ generation had a great deal more fun!
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    Nope, parents can top up the vouchers if they like.
    You're fired.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062
    kinabalu said:

    Yes but all that stuff - "levelling up" - is motherhood and apple pie. It's boring to talk about things everyone signs up to. It's just platitudes and waffle most of the time if you go that route.

    For example -

    We need to make state schools SO good that nobody in their right mind would fork out for private.

    No doubt everybody agrees with that. I certainly do. But it's going precisely nowhere.
    Good schools don't appear out of thin air, they appear because of competition and academic selection.

    Wealthy parents might be prepared to send their children to an outstanding state comprehensive or grammar school, they will always go private over an inadequate or requires improvement state school
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    eristdoof said:

    I have friends in the UK who are teachers, friends in the UK who gave up teaching, and friends in Germany who are teachers, including my girlfriend.

    All of the UK teachers I know who gave up, did so because of the crazy out of hours workload not because of the pay. Comparing the working conditions between the two countries I see two differences. Thie biggest difference is that homework is not marked by the teachers in Germany. Exams are marked by teachers, but not the standard homework.

    The other difference is the teachers in Germany are there to help the pupils learn as much as possible. They are not there to maximise the exam results. The difference might seem subtle to some outside of education, but the effect this has on job satisfaction is considerable. Once the job satisfaction gets wringed out of you that's when you leave the profession.
    Great observation.
    I don’t know much about the German system, but that certainly rings true for the UK.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,263

    Altered Images-era Clare Grogan
    She has aged well, but yes that perfect pop pixie is a good choice:

    https://youtu.be/6t1vaF50Ks0
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,482
    Evening all :)

    Just read all TfL London buses will be free from Monday.

    Instead, passengers will board and exit from the middle doors only and won't have to tap Oyster cards on any readers.

    This is apparently to keep drivers as safe as possible after a number of drivers died from coronavirus.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733

    Nope, parents can top up the vouchers if they like.
    Your proposed system places considerable reliance on the competence of parents. Which would likely exacerbate current inequalities,

  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,689
    Some straight talking from Professor Costello today.

    Everything he said was spot on.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    OllyT said:

    Compare that to Trump or Boris/Raab. It makes you want to weep
    And now imagine Piers Morgan yelling “answer the question! Yes or No!”

    Politicians can only develop thoughtful answers if they are given the space to do so. Being respectful doesn’t mean giving them an easy ride
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062
    eristdoof said:

    I have friends in the UK who are teachers, friends in the UK who gave up teaching, and friends in Germany who are teachers, including my girlfriend.

    All of the UK teachers I know who gave up, did so because of the crazy out of hours workload not because of the pay. Comparing the working conditions between the two countries I see two differences. Thie biggest difference is that homework is not marked by the teachers in Germany. Exams are marked by teachers, but not the standard homework.

    The other difference is the teachers in Germany are there to help the pupils learn as much as possible. They are not there to maximise the exam results. The difference might seem subtle to some outside of education, but the effect this has on job satisfaction is considerable. Once the job satisfaction gets wringed out of you that's when you leave the profession.
    Germany is still largely selective, with gymnasiums in most states the equivalent of our grammar schools
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    kinabalu said:

    But compared to our bunch of desperadoes ...
    We do ok. the Scottish banks were basket cases, as were some of the provincial mortgage banks.

    Lloyds and Barclays did ok as did Abbey and MCHC.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    Foxy said:

    That is the experience of a profession. Whether teacher, priest, lawyer or physician, your contact with a person can change their life, for better or worse. It tends to be a memorable experience too.
    True. But more pronounced with teachers because as well as one versus many it's adult and child. You are a BIG figure in their life in a literal sense too.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,263
    Nigelb said:

    Excellent.
    The angst over the production of them is significant, and unnecessary.
    Be careful, some places and courses value them.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Has his promotion come through?
    Given they kept calling probably not
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    ydoethur said:

    And there, instantly - and not with an edit to rip it out of context - is why people who have never taught do not understand education. Nobody you teach for any length of time is ever ‘nothing’ to a teacher. The difficulty here is I only taught him once. If he had been one of the Year 11 class I taught for five months, I would have known him alright.
    I was impressed that my Head Man’s wife recognised me when I bumped into her in Peter Jones 20 years later...
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,689
    First crisps in over 3 weeks. Yum!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,548
    edited April 2020
    kinabalu said:

    Twisting words is not the same (or as bad) as imputing false motive. Not that I was twisting your words. I was merely seeking to condense.

    If you say so...

    I will admit that is the most unconvincing statement I have heard since a student when I was on teaching prac did actually say they couldn’t hand in their homework ‘because the dog ate my USB pen,’ but it isn’t ultimately very important. You have shown that your position on this is not based on reasoned arguments so reasoned arguments are unlikely to move you.

    Have a good evening.
  • Nigelb said:

    Your proposed system places considerable reliance on the competence of parents. Which would likely exacerbate current inequalities,

    I wish there was a solution to this.

    What we are currently doing isn't working.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Cookie said:

    Some private schools, apparently, are refusing to provide predicted grades unless parents pay the whole year's fees for schooling they aren't really getting. Which some parents are unable to do, no longer having a job or a business. It's a pickle.
    The 20-30 that I’ve seen figures for are cutting fees by 20-30%
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Or we could just bring back grammar schools.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    Charles said:

    I was impressed that my Head Man’s wife recognised me when I bumped into her in Peter Jones 20 years later...
    I didn’t realise you spent time with a tribe ?
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    MaxPB said:

    It's like sending soldiers into battle with a pocket knife. The first nurse to die because of the revised guidelines is going to be on the front page of The Sun and all over social media.
    There is a shortage of PPE.

    Would you rather they didn’t treat the patients?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    HYUFD said:

    According to the Sutton trust state school teachers are more likely to have BEd degrees but independent school teachers more likely to have MScs and PhDs and postgraduate qualifications in the subjects they teach.

    5% of state school teachers and 17% of independent school teachers went to Oxbridge.
    https://www.suttontrust.com/our-research/teaching-by-degrees/

    You've gone native calling them "independent schools". Only they call themselves that.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,329
    Charles said:

    And now imagine Piers Morgan yelling “answer the question! Yes or No!”

    Politicians can only develop thoughtful answers if they are given the space to do so. Being respectful doesn’t mean giving them an easy ride
    When Morgan interviewed Helen Whately on Weds, I defy anybody to admit to thinking she was ‘laughing at elderly people dying in care homes’ rather than ‘exacerbated at his pompous interviewing/interrupting technique’
  • OllyTOllyT Posts: 5,035
    MaxPB said:

    Now the government has changed the rules to make them more likely to die. Before this it was still all under the "well it's come out of nowhere" now we're 8-10 weeks in and still haven't resolved the shortages.
    Everyone wants the government to succeed in getting to grips with the virus for all our sakes.

    Unfortunately I have a growing feeling that we have a largely inexperienced and second rate cabinet handling this crisis. I don't consider Johnson a politician with much gravitas himself and his cabinet was largely selected on the grounds of their willingness to see through a no deal Brexit if necessary.

    Of course the current crisis could not have been foreseen at the time but the upshot is we are led by people like Raab, Patel and Hancock who I'm afraid are all beginning to look out of their depth.
  • Fysics_TeacherFysics_Teacher Posts: 6,303
    kinabalu said:

    You've gone native calling them "independent schools". Only they call themselves that.
    Not calling people by what they self-identify as is extremely rude.
  • dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,307
    P45 for this thread.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    ydoethur said:

    And there, instantly - and not with an edit to rip it out of context - is why people who have never taught do not understand education. Nobody you teach for any length of time is ever ‘nothing’ to a teacher. The difficulty here is I only taught him once. If he had been one of the Year 11 class I taught for five months, I would have known him alright.
    Except you have done exactly that. Edited it and deleted the rest of the comment which gave it the required context.

    A teacher is a far bigger figure in the life of a child than vice versa. And the imbalance is all the greater because it is also adult child.

    This is why the profession is so important and why the quality control over entrants is so important.

    Is that not a reasonable observation? Or should only teachers be commenting on this whole subject?
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,359
    New thread.
  • eristdooferistdoof Posts: 5,076
    HYUFD said:

    Germany is still largely selective, with gymnasiums in most states the equivalent of our grammar schools
    For a start none of the teachers I know in Germany are in Gymnasien, but secondly what has this at all got to do with what I wrote?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    Not calling people by what they self-identify as is extremely rude.
    :smile:
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    ydoethur said:

    If you say so...

    I will admit that is the most unconvincing statement I have heard since a student when I was on teaching prac did actually say they couldn’t hand in their homework ‘because the dog ate my USB pen,’ but it isn’t ultimately very important. You have shown that your position on this is not based on reasoned arguments so reasoned arguments are unlikely to move you.

    Have a good evening.
    Bollox. I do logic and reasoning. You do banalities and waffle.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    Charles said:

    We do ok. the Scottish banks were basket cases, as were some of the provincial mortgage banks.

    Lloyds and Barclays did ok as did Abbey and MCHC.
    Barclays were OK through the sheer dumb luck of being outbid by Fred for ABN.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    HYUFD said:

    Good schools don't appear out of thin air, they appear because of competition and academic selection.

    Wealthy parents might be prepared to send their children to an outstanding state comprehensive or grammar school, they will always go private over an inadequate or requires improvement state school
    But we don't want any good schools. The very term implies the need for bad ones. We just want schools.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    And anyway- in terms of competent access to teaching that will get your child the grades they deserve, there's not that much in it between state and private sectors. (Seriously. Unless your local comp is one of the small number of very worst, it's better that they spend 1 hour a day doing extra reading than spending that time travelling to and from a more distant but better school.)
    It's the other stuff- the studious classmates, the networking and so on which is much much harder to do in the context of a state comprehensive. And that problem, which is real and huge, is much harder to fix with money.
    Yes. The 2 big advantages. Funding. Intake.

    The most advantaged pupils have the most spent on them.

    Should be the other way around IMO.
  • johnoundlejohnoundle Posts: 120
    OllyT said:

    Everyone wants the government to succeed in getting to grips with the virus for all our sakes.

    Unfortunately I have a growing feeling that we have a largely inexperienced and second rate cabinet handling this crisis. I don't consider Johnson a politician with much gravitas himself and his cabinet was largely selected on the grounds of their willingness to see through a no deal Brexit if necessary.

    Of course the current crisis could not have been foreseen at the time but the upshot is we are led by people like Raab, Patel and Hancock who I'm afraid are all beginning to look out of their depth.

    I really don't understand why such a frenzy is now being whipped up by the media other than their desperation to try & find a sensational story & if not to fabricate one..

    I spent my entire career working for the US multinational that invented & patented the SMS (Spunbond Meltdown Spunbond) fabric that is now globally used for surgical gowns.There are other workable options.

    For example industrial coveralls (boiler suits)which again due the barrier properties of SMS are widely used for protection purposes in a variety of industries. The main difference is the colour of the fabric, blue for surgical gowns & white, grey for coveralls.
    I alerted my MP to this option a couple of weeks ago as there must be literally hundreds of thousands of coveralls sitting in industrial companies warehouses & at their distributors.

    The UK market is under developed in terms of single use surgical gowns (currently used as PPE gowns). With reusable linen gown still being widely used in Operating Theatres throughout the UK, they should be readily available for use with a plastic apron for additional protection.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,548
    kinabalu said:

    Bollox. I do logic and reasoning. You do banalities and waffle.
    Is that an irregular verb? I do logic and reasoning, you do banalities and waffle, he is a Civil Servant at the Department for Education?

    As for the rest - it’s a long while since I’ve seen anyone have a meltdown like this over a subject they have so little understanding of. Are you sure Dominic Cummings hasn’t possessed you?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    ydoethur said:

    Is that an irregular verb? I do logic and reasoning, you do banalities and waffle, he is a Civil Servant at the Department for Education?

    As for the rest - it’s a long while since I’ve seen anyone have a meltdown like this over a subject they have so little understanding of. Are you sure Dominic Cummings hasn’t possessed you?
    :smile:

    Look, I can't restrict my comments to matters of which I have great knowledge, otherwise it's game over for me. It would be goodbye and god bless.

    Anyway. Perfectly satisfactory late night exchange and many thanks for it. All insults recalled to the pavilion.
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