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Is the general election betting overstating LAB chances? – politicalbetting.com

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  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited November 2022
    Leon said:

    You are weirdly prickly and defensive on this question. I suspect it’s coz you are torn between your mildly woke centrist tendencies (= private schools bad) and your half-buried desire to socially boast of your poshness (“nephews at Eton”)

    Entertaining
    Nah. Not prickly at all. I am not in the a/m/j field and if you tell me it is a hotbed of nepotism and old-school tie-ism then who am I to disagree.

    The debate was about private schools and @Jonathan said it was solely about the old school tie. I disagreed then and I disagree now. I believe they provide a fantastic education. Or so my nephews tell me.

    And apart entry into The Life Guards, and now you tell me arts/media/journalism, I have had no experiences whatsoever of needing to be an OE or public schoolboy to get on in life. I have absolutely accepted that public schoolboys do extremely well in life. So there is a definite advantage to being privately schooled aside from knowing the odd duke. And public schoolgirls. Did I mention my nieces at all?

    If anyone is prickly I would contend that it is you who so nearly but didn't after all provide a superior education for your daughter. And were denied one yourself. Not that it has harmed your life too much.
  • FPT
    eek said:

    One for @Sunil_Prasannan - a small piece of track that you can rarely access being used between Christmas and the new year https://www.ianvisits.co.uk/articles/unusual-use-of-london-overground-track-over-christmas-59078/

    Thank you for the heads up, but I first did that route as early as 2008, and most recently did it in September.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,269
    Scott_xP said:

    And that is the problem. The education at private schools is not necessarily better than at a state school, but the environment, the social connections, the extra curricular activities and the entitlement is worth every penny to the parents.
    It also depends on what you mean by 'education'. At my old school, the attitude was very much: "If you want to learn, we will support you". If you wanted to learn, the teachers were very available, even outside lesson hours. If you did not want to learn... well, then your parents are wasting their money. They would not force you to work.

    A friend works at a good private school (despite being a leftie at uni), and she says her school is the opposite: they make kids work, but there is much less opportunity for extra or outside-lessons work.

    I see my old school as being a bit like university: how hard you work is pretty much up to you.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025
    carnforth said:

    Update on the Scotland is More Progressive than England theory:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-63807748

    Aping their betters in the Palace down south
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,672

    So what about the “never kissed a Tory” thing?
    It's a joke! I've kissed several...
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566
    TOPPING said:

    Nah. Not prickly at all. I am not in the a/m/j field and if you tell me it is a hotbed of nepotism and old-school tie-ism then who am I to disagree.

    The debate was about private schools and @Jonathan said it was solely about the old school tie. I disagreed then and I disagree now. I believe they provide a fantastic education. Or so my nephews tell me.

    And apart entry into The Life Guards, and now you tell me arts/media/journalism, I have had no experiences whatsoever of needing to be an OE or public schoolboy to get on in life. I have absolutely accepted that public schoolboys do extremely well in life. So there is a definite advantage to being privately schooled aside from knowing the odd duke. And public schoolgirls. Did I mention my nieces at all?

    If anyone is prickly I would contend that it is you who so nearly but didn't after all provide a superior education for your daughter. And were denied one yourself. Not that it has harmed your life too much.
    Lol. QED
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,148
    Ghedebrav said:

    Re private schools; I have a similarly visceral reaction to it that many others do, but whenever you have an instinctive response to an issue it's always worth examining why.

    The baseline here is that it is unfair that some people born into wealthier circumstances will get the benefit of a better education (and crucially, connections and aspirations) than others born into humbler circs. Perpetuating this privilege can lead to certain professions being (or at least feeling like) a 'closed shop'. Of course there are always counterexamples, but like the captain of industry who pulled themselves up by the bootstraps, their story is engaging but misleading.

    On the other hand to my mind there is no ethical difference between private schooling and moving to an area with better schools - they are effectively the same thing, using your wealth and means to improve your children's education chances (though without necessarily quite the same connections and privileges). The best performing school in the country at GCSE, last time I looked ,was a state school (Altrincham Girl's, a grammar). You could say the same for intensive tutoring.

    So what to do? The root cause is inequality, and really the way we school our children is a symptom - albeit a symptom which entrenches and perpetuates the root cause. To be honest though - I don't see a huge problem with taking the charitable status away from these businesses, and it's actually a fairly smart bit of politics from Starmer - it differentiates the parties on an issue that realistically won't have a huge real-life impact, but says to regular folk 'we're with you, not the privileged few'.

    The key problem is the ideology of meritocracy - that we are seeking to arrange society to reward those who deserve rewarding, with the corollary that those who fail deserve to be punished for their failure, and those who are rich have earned their wealth through their merits.

    This ideology is problematic because the playing field isn't level - which is why private schooling arouses such ire - and because it's a logical impossibility for everyone to succeed and become doctors or lawyers, and we're always going to have some people at the bottom of the heap, because heaps don't levitate.

    If you guarantee for everyone a minimum living standard that allows for living with dignity, security and a degree of comfort and leisure, then the consequences of success/failure in the great meritocratic struggle are less acute. And then it doesn't matter so much if the deck is stacked.
  • Trains. Must... have... trains...





  • pingping Posts: 3,805
    I’ve just had a reasonable sized bet on France to win the WC at 6.6.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,450
    MaxPB said:

    87% is such a bogus number, the school my mum works for is rated outstanding and it most certainly isn't.
    Most outstanding schools haven't been re-assessed in the last decade and a half.
  • sladeslade Posts: 2,157
    JohnO said:

    There IS a by-election today for Surrey County Council, but the candidate has most definitely not been suspended. You’re thinking of the one tomorrow for Waverley Borough Council.
    Sorry - my mistake.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,450
    TOPPING said:

    Don't get @isam started on Starmer's education.
    Was anyone suggesting isam should educate Starmer ?
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    ping said:

    I’ve just had a reasonable sized bet on France to win the WC at 6.6.

    OMG I’ve just realised we could be about to experience peak France. They could be about to win both the football and rugby world cups, before hosting the Olympics.

    The 2020s just keep getting worse.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,697
    kinabalu said:

    Re Objective Truth from earlier, wouldn't the statement "covid vaccines offer protection against serious illness" qualify? - ie someone who says they don't is not offering an opinion, they are either mistaken or lying. That's how I look at it anyway. And there are plenty of similar examples.
    Not all covid vaccines are equal… I wouldn’t be lined up to get Sputnik for example… and don’t get me started on Novavax
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,697
    TimS said:

    I suspect he’s right. It’s one on the list of “all in it together” issues.

    I’m already paying through the nose for private school fees and increasingly wondering what’s the point. It’s financially ruinous, the educational benefits are marginal and offset by adjustments made by universities, and it leaves me with the feeling of social guilt that I could do without.

    It’s the bloody open days that do it, with all the swish facilities.
    So not “social cachet” then 😂

  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    MaxPB said:

    How much extra would the VAT increase raise vs the money required to educate the kids who then go to the state sector? If the number requires the state to spend more money then it's purely ideological and that's how the Tories need to hit back. This move takes money out of the education budget.

    It is politics of envy and class war pure and simple. Looks like levelling down will be the hallmark of the Starmer government. Twas ever thus with the left and fortunately, since the essence of this approach is completely at odds with human nature which is very strong wrt to families and children, it will be a short-lived interlude.
  • Nigelb said:

    Was anyone suggesting isam should educate Starmer ?
    :)

  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,762

    So not “social cachet” then 😂

    I don't think 'social cachet' applies! In my experience, anyone who either went to private school or is sending their own kids to private school (or even considering it) is very quiet and apologetic about the fact.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    Leon said:

    Lol. QED
    Lol. QED
  • Is there a PB marine biologists' trust? Saw this creature washed up on Kappad Beach, near Calicut (Vasco da Gama, 1498 and all that). Looks like an isopod crustacean from above, but not sure about the ventral view. Any ideas?







  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,697
    Cookie said:

    I don't think 'social cachet' applies! In my experience, anyone who either went to private school or is sending their own kids to private school (or even considering it) is very quiet and apologetic about the fact.
    A couple of days ago someone was going on about the social cachet of private schooling to resounding mockery on here
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,450
    Cookie said:

    I don't think 'social cachet' applies! In my experience, anyone who either went to private school or is sending their own kids to private school (or even considering it) is very quiet and apologetic about the fact.
    More société cachée, then ?
  • slade said:

    Sorry - my mistake.
    The usual commentrary from Andrew Teale https://medium.com/britainelects/previewing-the-sunbury-common-and-ashford-common-surrey-by-election-of-30th-november-2022-15600c360bea

    I like the fact that whilst there are two commons in the name, the area is almost completely built over with a water treament works and a little recreational ground. It is in Kwasi Kwarteng's (who he?) constituency.

    Sunbury Common and Ashford Common, Surrey County Council - C defence: C, L, LD, REFUK, TUSC
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,481
    felix said:

    It is politics of envy and class war pure and simple. Looks like levelling down will be the hallmark of the Starmer government. Twas ever thus with the left and fortunately, since the essence of this approach is completely at odds with human nature which is very strong wrt to families and children, it will be a short-lived interlude.
    A truly class-breaking solution would of course to be for the Government to pay for children who could pass the entrance exams to go to private schools.

    That well known egalitarian Margaret Thatcher introduced such a scheme in 1982 but the Blair government - true enemies of aspiration - scrapped it. For that alone he was unfit to be Prime Minister, never mind Ecclestone, selling peerage, Iraq, etc. etc. etc.
  • DJ41DJ41 Posts: 792
    edited November 2022
    TOPPING said:

    Your sample size is letting you down there.

    Eton provides a super demanding, comprehensive (small 'c'), and I believe fantastic education. Not having been there but knowing plenty of Etonians including aforementioned nephews.

    The "old school tie" just doesn't exist. Look at Oxbridge entry for example. If you are an Etonian you are disadvantaged vs state school or even non-Etonian candidates (the school puts up only one candidate per college for this reason). And I think we can say that Oxbridge provides a fantastic education.
    Not everyone does agree with you about that.

    The colleges at Oxford and Cambridge that take undergraduates are similar to versions of private boarding schools. Both places nurture woodenheaded creatures of the system.

    (That isn't stereotyping. Some successfully resist the conditioning. Those who think that criticising institutions necessarily implies stereotyping those who have attended such institutions should get out some more. Such a belief is common of course among squareheads - those who were successfully conditioned there. Cf. guys who've spent a long time in prison and who have it written all over them for many years afterwards.)

    Every college at Cambridge that takes undergraduates (which is the vast majority of colleges) also has a high table in the dining hall. Every single f***ing one of them! Wow, what a good "education", lol.

    It's not all about education. The conditioning has several strands, and often the association between them is sick.

    The college system at both Oxford and Cambridge should be got rid of. The patrician attitude of those who run the colleges is utterly revolting and one day someone will shine a light on it.

    That it's the colleges that control admission to those two universities is completely unjustifiable. Beancounters may also note that it's a waste of resources, but so are many things at Oxford and Cambridge. Is it good for charities to waste resources? :smile:

    I wonder what proportion of the population of Britain who haven't been to Oxford or Cambridge or had close family members who went there are even aware that it's the colleges that control admission and that an applicant for an undergraduate place can't normally even apply to more than a single college?


  • A couple of days ago someone was going on about the social cachet of private schooling to resounding mockery on here
    Bugger off. Someone asked Why do people send their children to private schools and I said that was one reason, which seemed to wind up some chippy fucker. Not saying it's a good thing, not saying where I or my children went to school.
  • Jonathan said:

    I took the loving home and stability route for my children's confidence. :grimace: High risk! In academic terms so far so good in the school 5mins down the road. First child did well. Second has mocks next week.
    When we moved from Newark to rural Lincolnshire (about 15 miles from where we previously lived) my daughter still had 2 years left at her state junior school where she was very happy so we kept her there and just drove her back and forth each day. At the time my son was 2 and, perhaps foolishly, we had not even begun to think about schooling for him. When we came to look at starting him at school the local village school was in special measures and had mixed age classes so with him only having just turned 4 by a month he would have been in with kids of 7 and 8 in the same class. This was the only offer from the local authority so we made the decision to send him to a private infant/junior school in Grantham. Once he turned 11 he came back into the state school sector.

    Looking back this was exactly the right move and I would do the same again. He is much like me in that he will never be a high flyer in terms of education but he enjoys school very much and loves learning so I have no regrets about our choices and certainly don't feel any guilt about it.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,450
    DJ41 said:

    Not everyone does agree with you about that.

    The colleges at Oxford and Cambridge that take undergraduates are similar to versions of private boarding schools. Both places nurture woodenheaded creatures of the system.

    (That isn't stereotyping. Some successfully resist the conditioning. Those who think that criticising institutions necessarily implies stereotyping those who have attended such institutions should get out some more. Such a belief is common of course among squareheads - those who were successfully conditioned there. Cf. guys who've spent a long time in prison and who have it written all over them for many years afterwards.)

    Every college at Cambridge that takes undergraduates (which is the vast majority of colleges) also has a high table in the dining hall. Every single f***ing one of them! Wow, what a good "education", lol.

    It's not all about education. The conditioning has several strands, and often the association between them is sick.

    The college system at both Oxford and Cambridge should be got rid of. The patrician attitude of those who run the colleges is utterly revolting and one day someone will shine a light on it.

    That it's the colleges that control admission to those two universities is completely unjustifiable. Beancounters may also note that it's a waste of resources, but so are many things at Oxford and Cambridge. Is it good for charities to waste resources? :smile:

    I wonder what proportion of the population of Britain who haven't been to Oxford or Cambridge or had close family members who went there are even aware that it's the colleges that control admission and that an applicant for an undergraduate place can't normally even apply to more than a single college?


    Oxford and Cambridge both rate *very* highly, internationally.
  • pillsbury said:

    Bugger off. Someone asked Why do people send their children to private schools and I said that was one reason, which seemed to wind up some chippy fucker. Not saying it's a good thing, not saying where I or my children went to school.
    I just did a laughing emoji because I thought it was a funny thing to say. I didn't mean to wind you up.
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,376
    edited November 2022
    With a son living in Sydney and a daughter living in Copenhagen, I've a good excuse to watch the match this afternoon.

    But why, oh why, do the Aussies have to use the tune to 'Good Bless the Prince of Wales' for their National Anthem? They are already out.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,566
    Jonathan said:

    OMG I’ve just realised we could be about to experience peak France. They could be about to win both the football and rugby world cups, before hosting the Olympics.

    The 2020s just keep getting worse.
    I realised that some time ago. They will be insufferable

    It's why I've got £15 on France to win the soccer WC at 6/1. I want some consolation if it begins to happen
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,243
    Sean_F said:

    Oxford and Cambridge both rate *very* highly, internationally.
    Most people in St Petersburg think they are full of woodenheaded creatures of the system.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,243
    TOPPING said:

    Your sample size is letting you down there.

    Eton provides a super demanding, comprehensive (small 'c'), and I believe fantastic education. Not having been there but knowing plenty of Etonians including aforementioned nephews.

    The "old school tie" just doesn't exist. Look at Oxbridge entry for example. If you are an Etonian you are disadvantaged vs state school or even non-Etonian candidates (the school puts up only one candidate per college for this reason). And I think we can say that Oxbridge provides a fantastic education.

    By all means rail against private schools for the unfair advantage it gives but accept that it does this because of the quality of education.

    Bring on the voucher system.
    There were several old Etonians in my year at Trinity.

    There were more people from Manchester Grammar School, mind.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,450
    rcs1000 said:

    Most people in St Petersburg think they are full of woodenheaded creatures of the system.
    Touched a nerve ?

    Just kidding; they are posting the usual bollocks.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,450
    Stachoos...

    Odesa’s council has voted today to remove the city’s giant statue of Russian empress Catherine The Great - viewed by many as the city’s founder - and to move it to a park dedicated to the “Soviet past”
    https://mobile.twitter.com/markmackinnon/status/1597925590551642113

    Slightly odd history there, but good piece of trolling.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860

    Is there a PB marine biologists' trust? Saw this creature washed up on Kappad Beach, near Calicut (Vasco da Gama, 1498 and all that). Looks like an isopod crustacean from above, but not sure about the ventral view. Any ideas?







    How big is it? Wanting for scale here.

    I'd say not an isopod, as the exoskeleton isn't segmented enough and it doesn't look like it has enough legs.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    Ghedebrav said:

    How big is it? Wanting for scale here.

    I'd say not an isopod, as the exoskeleton isn't segmented enough and it doesn't look like it has enough legs.
    Ah - it's a sand crab (or mole crab): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emerita_(crustacean)
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100

    Is there a PB marine biologists' trust? Saw this creature washed up on Kappad Beach, near Calicut (Vasco da Gama, 1498 and all that). Looks like an isopod crustacean from above, but not sure about the ventral view. Any ideas?







    That is one of SeanT's genital louse.

  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,762
    rcs1000 said:

    There were several old Etonians in my year at Trinity.

    There were more people from Manchester Grammar School, mind.
    Which it should be noted is also a private school.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Leon said:

    I realised that some time ago. They will be insufferable

    It's why I've got £15 on France to win the soccer WC at 6/1. I want some consolation if it begins to happen
    I find my French pals are actually very gracious and modest about how brilliant their world champion football team are.

    Which makes it worse.

  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,672
    JohnO said:

    There IS a by-election today for Surrey County Council, but the candidate has most definitely not been suspended. You’re thinking of the one tomorrow for Waverley Borough Council.
    That's right. Election is tomorrow rather than today, of course. The LibDems are pretty confident, partly as the Greens came second last time but have endorsed the LDs this time. Labour got 7% last time and should do better this time.

    The King's Lynn case sounds interesting and unusual - what was so special about the former councillor that the other parties are not contesting the seat?
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    Sean_F said:

    Oxford and Cambridge both rate *very* highly, internationally.
    Reminds me of that episode of Blackadder goes forth in which Blackadder nabs a 'German spy'* by listing Oxford, Cambridge and Hull as the great educational institutions of Britain, which the 'spy' agrees with. Melchett agrees this is genius, as any Brit would know Oxford (or it may have been Cambridge) is a shit hole.

    *turns out there was no intentional 'spy', just George writing detailed letters to a German uncle
  • DJ41 said:

    Not everyone does agree with you about that.

    The colleges at Oxford and Cambridge that take undergraduates are similar to versions of private boarding schools. Both places nurture woodenheaded creatures of the system.

    (That isn't stereotyping. Some successfully resist the conditioning. Those who think that criticising institutions necessarily implies stereotyping those who have attended such institutions should get out some more. Such a belief is common of course among squareheads - those who were successfully conditioned there. Cf. guys who've spent a long time in prison and who have it written all over them for many years afterwards.)

    Every college at Cambridge that takes undergraduates (which is the vast majority of colleges) also has a high table in the dining hall. Every single f***ing one of them! Wow, what a good "education", lol.

    It's not all about education. The conditioning has several strands, and often the association between them is sick.

    The college system at both Oxford and Cambridge should be got rid of. The patrician attitude of those who run the colleges is utterly revolting and one day someone will shine a light on it.

    That it's the colleges that control admission to those two universities is completely unjustifiable. Beancounters may also note that it's a waste of resources, but so are many things at Oxford and Cambridge. Is it good for charities to waste resources? :smile:

    I wonder what proportion of the population of Britain who haven't been to Oxford or Cambridge or had close family members who went there are even aware that it's the colleges that control admission and that an applicant for an undergraduate place can't normally even apply to more than a single college?


    I'm not entirely sure what point you're trying to make but, regarding your last paragraph, there is at least some cooperation between the Oxford colleges. My lad, for example, ended up being offered a place at a different college to the one that he applied to.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,186
    DJ41 said:

    How's their emotional intelligence? :smile:

    You sound as though you think those who want to put an end to places like Eton are simply ignorant of what places like Eton are all about.

    You make a mistake, my friend. Some of us aren't.
    So the mask slips. It isn't just VAT. It's a class war tankie 'tear down the lot of them' view. Understood.



  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,243
    Cookie said:

    Which it should be noted is also a private school.
    That is true.

    I would suggest that most private schools offer one really important thing: they can get rid of disruptive students. If Joe Bloggs is making it harder for others to learn, then most private schools will say "Goodbye Joe!"

    State schools don't have that freedom to let troublesome students go. And that's a drag on all the non-troublesome students.

  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,186
    DJ41 said:

    Not everyone does agree with you about that.

    The colleges at Oxford and Cambridge that take undergraduates are similar to versions of private boarding schools. Both places nurture woodenheaded creatures of the system.

    (That isn't stereotyping. Some successfully resist the conditioning. Those who think that criticising institutions necessarily implies stereotyping those who have attended such institutions should get out some more. Such a belief is common of course among squareheads - those who were successfully conditioned there. Cf. guys who've spent a long time in prison and who have it written all over them for many years afterwards.)

    Every college at Cambridge that takes undergraduates (which is the vast majority of colleges) also has a high table in the dining hall. Every single f***ing one of them! Wow, what a good "education", lol.

    It's not all about education. The conditioning has several strands, and often the association between them is sick.

    The college system at both Oxford and Cambridge should be got rid of. The patrician attitude of those who run the colleges is utterly revolting and one day someone will shine a light on it.

    That it's the colleges that control admission to those two universities is completely unjustifiable. Beancounters may also note that it's a waste of resources, but so are many things at Oxford and Cambridge. Is it good for charities to waste resources? :smile:

    I wonder what proportion of the population of Britain who haven't been to Oxford or Cambridge or had close family members who went there are even aware that it's the colleges that control admission and that an applicant for an undergraduate place can't normally even apply to more than a single college?


    One of the colleges rejected you, didn't they?
  • DJ41 said:

    Not everyone does agree with you about that.

    The colleges at Oxford and Cambridge that take undergraduates are similar to versions of private boarding schools. Both places nurture woodenheaded creatures of the system.

    (That isn't stereotyping. Some successfully resist the conditioning. Those who think that criticising institutions necessarily implies stereotyping those who have attended such institutions should get out some more. Such a belief is common of course among squareheads - those who were successfully conditioned there. Cf. guys who've spent a long time in prison and who have it written all over them for many years afterwards.)

    Every college at Cambridge that takes undergraduates (which is the vast majority of colleges) also has a high table in the dining hall. Every single f***ing one of them! Wow, what a good "education", lol.

    It's not all about education. The conditioning has several strands, and often the association between them is sick.

    The college system at both Oxford and Cambridge should be got rid of. The patrician attitude of those who run the colleges is utterly revolting and one day someone will shine a light on it.

    That it's the colleges that control admission to those two universities is completely unjustifiable. Beancounters may also note that it's a waste of resources, but so are many things at Oxford and Cambridge. Is it good for charities to waste resources? :smile:

    I wonder what proportion of the population of Britain who haven't been to Oxford or Cambridge or had close family members who went there are even aware that it's the colleges that control admission and that an applicant for an undergraduate place can't normally even apply to more than a single college?


    I don't see your point about colleges handling admissions. It's not like they are posh frat houses. Like saying that it's bourgeois inefficiency that individual households cook their own meals instead of meals all coming from a central commisariat
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,186
    pillsbury said:

    I don't see your point about colleges handling admissions. It's not like they are posh frat houses. Like saying that it's bourgeois inefficiency that individual households cook their own meals instead of meals all coming from a central commisariat
    Don't give him ideas....
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,243
    edited November 2022

    I'm not entirely sure what point you're trying to make but, regarding your last paragraph, there is at least some cooperation between the Oxford colleges. My lad, for example, ended up being offered a place at a different college to the one that he applied to.
    Yep: the pool.

    It's fairly common for kids who apply to Trinity or Christ's to end up at Fitzwilliam or Girton.

    (It's called the pool at Cambridge, it may have a different name at Oxford.)
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    rcs1000 said:

    That is true.

    I would suggest that most private schools offer one really important thing: they can get rid of disruptive students. If Joe Bloggs is making it harder for others to learn, then most private schools will say "Goodbye Joe!"

    State schools don't have that freedom to let troublesome students go. And that's a drag on all the non-troublesome students.

    Can't state schools exclude such pupils?
  • Ghedebrav said:

    How big is it? Wanting for scale here.

    I'd say not an isopod, as the exoskeleton isn't segmented enough and it doesn't look like it has enough legs.
    It's say two or three inches long.
  • DJ41DJ41 Posts: 792
    edited November 2022
    Many Oxford and Cambridge graduates will jump to defend the college system even though they have never previously heard anybody criticise it in their entire lives. They just "know" it's good. It must be good, innit? As for the charity status of elite private schools, it's only from a patrician point of view that it makes sense to believe that institutions for the training of an elite are charitably serving the public interest.

    This clip explains the point well:

    "I serve the nation. You haven't the slightest idea what it means, have you?"

    A famous Bursar of King's College Cambridge called John Maynard Keynes wrote in his "General Theory" that there are dangerous human proclivities that can be made to flow into comparatively harmless channels by the existence of opportunities for amassing private wealth, proclivities that would otherwise find their outlet in cruelty and the reckless pursuit of personal power and authority.

    It's the same old idea - the white man's burden - it's in the best interest of the ruled to be ruled over by those who rule over them. Because if the rulers can't rule the way they want, then they'll get really nasty, and you wouldn't want that.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,450
    Nigelb said:

    Stachoos...

    Odesa’s council has voted today to remove the city’s giant statue of Russian empress Catherine The Great - viewed by many as the city’s founder - and to move it to a park dedicated to the “Soviet past”
    https://mobile.twitter.com/markmackinnon/status/1597925590551642113

    Slightly odd history there, but good piece of trolling.

    The Soviets would not have been happy about that.
  • Ghedebrav said:

    Ah - it's a sand crab (or mole crab): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emerita_(crustacean)
    Ooops, belay the last message. Thanks! Looks like what I thought was the front was actually the rear!
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,762
    rcs1000 said:

    That is true.

    I would suggest that most private schools offer one really important thing: they can get rid of disruptive students. If Joe Bloggs is making it harder for others to learn, then most private schools will say "Goodbye Joe!"

    State schools don't have that freedom to let troublesome students go. And that's a drag on all the non-troublesome students.

    Absolutely.
    My view is that the number 1 thing that sharp-elbowed parents want from a secondary school is a lack of bottom feeders. Whether their solution to that is private, grammar, posh suburb or church is largely secondary. If they can find a school where their offspring's classes won't be disrupted by bottom feeders and where getting smacked around the head will happen at worst irregularly, job done.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,186
    DJ41 said:

    Many Oxford and Cambridge graduates will jump to defend the college system even though they have never previously heard anybody criticise it in their entire lives. They just "know" it's good. It must be good, innit? As for the charity status of elite private schools, it's only from a patrician point of view that it makes sense to believe that institutions for the training of an elite are charitably serving the public interest.

    This explains the point well:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BqoGcC4S5jk#t=65s

    A famous Bursar of King's College Cambridge called John Maynard Keynes wrote in his "General Theory" that there are dangerous human proclivities that can be made to flow into comparatively harmless channels by the existence of opportunities for amassing private wealth, proclivities that would otherwise find their outlet in cruelty and the reckless pursuit of personal power and authority.

    It's the same old idea - the white man's burden - it's in the best interest of the ruled to be ruled over by those who rule over them. Because if the rulers can't rule the way they want, then they'll get really nasty, and you wouldn't want that.

    Hundreds of thousands of Communist officials proving his point wave hello
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,243
    TOPPING said:

    Can't state schools exclude such pupils?
    Local authorities have a legal obligation to educate children.

    In large prosperous authorities (or very dense urban areas like London) there are ways and means. But in a medium sized town with three secondary schools... well even if a disruptive kid is excluded from one, he'll just go the the next.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,243
    Tunisia take the lead.

    France is not unbeatable.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,800
    rcs1000 said:

    That is true.

    I would suggest that most private schools offer one really important thing: they can get rid of disruptive students. If Joe Bloggs is making it harder for others to learn, then most private schools will say "Goodbye Joe!"

    State schools don't have that freedom to let troublesome students go. And that's a drag on all the non-troublesome students.

    They did at my school. Two kids got excluded in first form and then another one in third form.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,243
    MaxPB said:

    They did at my school. Two kids got excluded in first form and then another one in third form.
    Sure: but the next secondary school along will have to take them. Now, if you were in one of the local authorities with specialist facilities for kids what don't mix well with other kids, that's great. But that's not most local authorities, because those are expensive.
  • rcs1000 said:

    Tunisia take the lead.

    France is not unbeatable.

    France C team....
  • Australia ahead....
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,724
    MaxPB said:

    They did at my school. Two kids got excluded in first form and then another one in third form.
    I think it was easier back in the day. A group got kicked out in my fifth form in 1990.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    rcs1000 said:

    Tunisia take the lead.

    France is not unbeatable.

    France ARE not unbeatable.

    But actually this is their reserves.
  • DJ41DJ41 Posts: 792
    edited November 2022
    rcs1000 said:

    Local authorities have a legal obligation to educate children.

    In large prosperous authorities (or very dense urban areas like London) there are ways and means. But in a medium sized town with three secondary schools... well even if a disruptive kid is excluded from one, he'll just go the the next.
    Local authorities only have an obligation if a child's parents choose to delegate their own legal responsibility. Parents can remove a child from the school system with immediate effect under s8(1)(d) of the Education (Pupil Registration) (England) Regulations 2006.

    "Ways and means" include the "education" of children by local authorities at home rather than at school. These children probably outnumber those who are electively educated at home by parents.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,906
    TOPPING said:

    Can't state schools exclude such pupils?
    Where do you think they would go - straight into chimney-sweeping, as in the good old days?
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560
    rcs1000 said:

    That is true.

    I would suggest that most private schools offer one really important thing: they can get rid of disruptive students. If Joe Bloggs is making it harder for others to learn, then most private schools will say "Goodbye Joe!"

    State schools don't have that freedom to let troublesome students go. And that's a drag on all the non-troublesome students.

    The problem isn't that private schools can, it's that state schools can't.
  • DJ41DJ41 Posts: 792
    edited November 2022
    Mortimer said:

    Hundreds of thousands of Communist officials proving his point wave hello
    Either posh rule or North Korea? Great breadth of imagination there.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    Cookie said:

    Absolutely.
    My view is that the number 1 thing that sharp-elbowed parents want from a secondary school is a lack of bottom feeders. Whether their solution to that is private, grammar, posh suburb or church is largely secondary. If they can find a school where their offspring's classes won't be disrupted by bottom feeders and where getting smacked around the head will happen at worst irregularly, job done.
    As a slightly left of centre (or maybe centrist) woke member of the academic metropolitan large village liberal elite, I endorse this view.

    One of the geographically plausible infant schools when we were looking for our eldest last year - in fact possibly the closest as the crow flies, although not closest by route - is in the middle of what might be called a 'challenging' estate. We didn't even view it. Among the other schools, there was little to choose; all pleasant, if needing a bit of money on buildings, with parents and kids who have at least some interest in learning.

    (But, importantly, also a socioeconomically diverse mix of people an backgrounds - I'm an academic, my son goes to school with the children of cement mixer drivers, electrical engineers, publicans, joiners, the local vicar, builders and high flyers in big insurance companies. Geographically, we'd probably have struggled to get him into the primary next to my university, where every other parent is an academic - but I wouldn't have wanted that for him anyway. The only thing I'd change is that it's very white and also CofE, but there weren't many options ot avoid either of those around here.)
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Selebian said:


    Reminds me of that episode of Blackadder goes

    forth in which Blackadder nabs a 'German spy'* by listing Oxford, Cambridge and Hull as the


    great educational institutions of Britain, which the 'spy' agrees with. Melchett agrees this is genius, as any Brit would know Oxford (or it may have been Cambridge) is a shit hole.

    *turns out there was no intentional 'spy', just George writing detailed letters to a German uncle
    Funny … but I fear we are just moments away from Fen Poly / Cowley Tech humble brag japes
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,252
    On class sizes: A quick Google search shows that my memory is correct: Japanese schools have quite large classes by American standards.
    Here's one source: https://www.oecd.org/education/skills-beyond-school/EDIF 2012--N9 FINAL.pdf

    There are, again from memory, two other differences that may be important. Japanese teachers have preparation time, which they spend -- with other teachers -- in a joint office. I think that could be very helpful, especially for beginning teachers.

    Second, this is a delicate subject in the US, but our teachers now tend to be near the bottom academically in our colleges and universities, which is, as I understand it, not true in Japan. (There is one interesting exception: our physical education teachers are usually good athletes.)
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560

    France ARE not unbeatable.

    But actually this is their reserves.
    I mean, he got "Tunisia take" correct...
  • MaxPB said:

    They did at my school. Two kids got excluded in first form and then another one in third form.
    It can happen, but the process is much harder. And said children still have to go somewhere, which is a bit of a bugger if your school consistently has spare places.

    (What really should be happening is acknowledging that, at some level, those kids need some hefty intervention to cope better with their lives, and that's cheaper and more effective while they are young than if we just let them turn into screwed up adults.

    But that's expensive and so always massively oversubscribed.)
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Driver said:

    I mean, he got "Tunisia take" correct...
    Fair point. 1 out of 2 does at least represent progress.

  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,450
    DJ41 said:

    Many Oxford and Cambridge graduates will jump to defend the college system even though they have never previously heard anybody criticise it in their entire lives. They just "know" it's good. It must be good, innit? As for the charity status of elite private schools, it's only from a patrician point of view that it makes sense to believe that institutions for the training of an elite are charitably serving the public interest.

    This clip explains the point well:

    "I serve the nation. You haven't the slightest idea what it means, have you?"

    A famous Bursar of King's College Cambridge called John Maynard Keynes wrote in his "General Theory" that there are dangerous human proclivities that can be made to flow into comparatively harmless channels by the existence of opportunities for amassing private wealth, proclivities that would otherwise find their outlet in cruelty and the reckless pursuit of personal power and authority.

    It's the same old idea - the white man's burden - it's in the best interest of the ruled to be ruled over by those who rule over them. Because if the rulers can't rule the way they want, then they'll get really nasty, and you wouldn't want that.

    Your chip is showing.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,516
    edited November 2022
    Selebian said:

    Reminds me of that episode of Blackadder goes forth in which Blackadder nabs a 'German spy'* by listing Oxford, Cambridge and Hull as the great educational institutions of Britain, which the 'spy' agrees with. Melchett agrees this is genius, as any Brit would know Oxford (or it may have been Cambridge) is a shit hole.

    *turns out there was no intentional 'spy', just George writing detailed letters to a German uncle
    "Oxford's a complete dump!"
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243

    Funny … but I fear we are just moments away from Fen Poly / Cowley Tech humble brag japes
    I have only (brief) experience of Cowley Tech* where I interviewed, but decided to go elsewhere (to a uni that is in a different town to the one it is named for)

    *that being Oxford, I take it, in reference to the old car plant?
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,762
    Selebian said:

    As a slightly left of centre (or maybe centrist) woke member of the academic metropolitan large village liberal elite, I endorse this view.

    One of the geographically plausible infant schools when we were looking for our eldest last year - in fact possibly the closest as the crow flies, although not closest by route - is in the middle of what might be called a 'challenging' estate. We didn't even view it. Among the other schools, there was little to choose; all pleasant, if needing a bit of money on buildings, with parents and kids who have at least some interest in learning.

    (But, importantly, also a socioeconomically diverse mix of people an backgrounds - I'm an academic, my son goes to school with the children of cement mixer drivers, electrical engineers, publicans, joiners, the local vicar, builders and high flyers in big insurance companies. Geographically, we'd probably have struggled to get him into the primary next to my university, where every other parent is an academic - but I wouldn't have wanted that for him anyway. The only thing I'd change is that it's very white and also CofE, but there weren't many options ot avoid either of those around here.)
    Slightly surprised you get a choice. In Trafford, every school is full: everyone is in the catchment for exactly one primary school, and if you want to go to a school aside from the one you are in catchment for, you have to put yourself on a waiting list and hope a space comes up. And uness you pass the 11+ it's lthllll the sae at secndary.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    ….
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,252
    Sometimes scandals can be revealing, generally. When the news of the Varsity Blues broke in the United States, I was astounded by the sums some parents had spent to get the their kids into the "right" universities. It couldn't be for the learning I thought, since the amounts spent could have hired private tutors with PhDs.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Varsity_Blues_scandal

    It seemed to me that there were two things going on: first, that parents were competing with other parents, second that parents were trying to make sure their kids met the right people, for business contacts, and for marriage.

    (I don't know whether those thoughts apply to schools in he UK.)
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    Cookie said:

    Slightly surprised you get a choice. In Trafford, every school is full: everyone is in the catchment for exactly one primary school, and if you want to go to a school aside from the one you are in catchment for, you have to put yourself on a waiting list and hope a space comes up. And uness you pass the 11+ it's lthllll the sae at secndary.
    Well, who knows? Might be we'd have ended up with the one we 'chose' whatever we'd put as first choice :wink:

    The chosen school is in the fortunate position (for us, at least) of having far too many for one class per year, but some capacity within two, so I don't think many get turned away.

    "lthllll the sae" sounds like a school founded by Rabbie Burns :tongue:
  • FeersumEnjineeyaFeersumEnjineeya Posts: 4,748
    edited November 2022
    DougSeal said:

    I think it was easier back in the day. A group got kicked out in my fifth form in 1990.
    One of my son's classmates got excluded from their grammar school. He wasn't a bad lad, but always doing stupid things and being generally disruptive. In the end it was flashing a knife around that got him the push. He was just trying to be big with some stupid little penknife, but it gave the school the excuse it needed.

    All's well that ends well though. He ended up doing much better at the local (very good) comp where he was one of the smart ones rather than one of the stragglers, and he even ended up getting some decent A-level grades. Some kids are just a better fit at a different school.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,278
    Just switched on the TV and the football matches are going the opposite way of expected.

    New thread.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,762
    Selebian said:

    Well, who knows? Might be we'd have ended up with the one we 'chose' whatever we'd put as first choice :wink:

    The chosen school is in the fortunate position (for us, at least) of having far too many for one class per year, but some capacity within two, so I don't think many get turned away.

    "lthllll the sae" sounds like a school founded by Rabbie Burns :tongue:
    Haha - Sorry - using phone keypad on four year old phone and backspace only works sporadically!
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    Driver said:

    I mean, he got "Tunisia take" correct...
    Sounds like a Grisham novel, that. The Tunisia Take
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    Chris said:

    Where do you think they would go - straight into chimney-sweeping, as in the good old days?
    I bloody well hope so. It's murder trying to get your chimneys swept right now. Not sure how long the training programme is so probably not as useful as I would like.

    I make no comment on whether they should or shouldn't be excluded, just to say that state schools have the ability to exclude pupils (as well as public schools).

    Whether they are then placed at other schools or home school I have no idea. The latter is of course fulfilling the state's obligation to educate children albeit I've no idea about the likely home schooling quality of an excluded pupil, given as we have noted the likely parental role in their being excluded in the first place.
  • NEW THREAD

  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560
    Selebian said:

    I have only (brief) experience of Cowley Tech* where I interviewed, but decided to go elsewhere (to a uni that is in a different town to the one it is named for)

    *that being Oxford, I take it, in reference to the old car plant?
    Historic Warwick?
  • PMQs score.

    Sunak 10

    Stamer 0

    The politics of envy over private education from Stamer is a disgrace.

    But I suspect in the country people will agree with Starmer.

    It's given me a reason to vote Tory.

    Probably the only one, but one nonetheless.
This discussion has been closed.