Hotmail Tech Support

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Tuesday, 30 November 2010

Ballet Teacher

Posted on 04:55 by Unknown
Given the choice of being kidnapped by a bunch of Somali pirates or ballet teacher Sarah Pirie, I'm afraid I wouldn't be choosing a stay in East Africa's Riviera. The bloke that she is pictured with doesn't look very happy though.

Before anybody asks- if it was a male teacher with a 15 year old girl, then I wouldn't think it was funny at all. I have never denied being guilty of every -ism known to Man (sorry Person).
Read More
Posted in | No comments

School report full of errors

Posted on 04:40 by Unknown
Gleed Girls' Technology College in Spalding, Lincolnshire is claiming a new record after one of their (I mean- its) teachers sent out a school report with 14 spelling mistakes in it.

I'm not surprised at all. Comprehensives haven't insisted on correct grammar or spelling for a couple of decades or more, so the young teachers are victims of the same system. Mind you it has become perfectly acceptable for them to say "Oh I'm not very good at spelling/maths/grammar" rather than to actually try and improve.

Commentators should feel free to mention pots and kettles if they wish.
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Monday, 29 November 2010

Snow Closure

Posted on 23:43 by Unknown
For the third year running, St Thickchilds has managed to be the first school in the area to declare itself closed due to the 1.5 cm of snow that fell on the hills several miles away. Beating local rivals Scagtown Comprehensive by almost 11 minutes, Headmaster (or Lead Learner as he prefers to be called) Mr Sandal proudly declared:

"Where we lead, others follow!"
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Friday, 26 November 2010

State School PE

Posted on 14:27 by Unknown
The British Association of Sports and Exercise Medicine have finally said something that has been obvious for the last 20 years. State School PE lessons do not give children any useful exercise.

Schools complain that Government spending cuts is wrecking sport, yet no money at all is needed to provide physical fitness, agility, coordination and strength training (just ask the Kenyan and Ethiopian distance runners who despite being far poorer than any of us, nevertheless win everything in sight).

Meanwhile our children's physical fitness has fallen to appalling levels and pupils are simply allowed to opt out if they don't wish to take part.

Is it any wonder that we are plagued by ever worsening levels of obesity?
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Thursday, 25 November 2010

Howard Flight and Lord Young

Posted on 14:18 by Unknown
So Howard Flight is now in trouble for saying that those on benefits are encouraged to breed whilst the middle classes find it very expensive. Something that is blatantly obvious but falls into the category of 'things you cannot say'.

Last week Lord Young said that 'most Britons had never had it so good'. For those with secure jobs and mortgages linked to the base rate this is also obviously true. The only question is whether they are in the majority. Nobody dared look up the statistics and he ended up having to resign.

David Cameron shamefully offered no support to either man and instead wants to spend a few million quid on a survey to find out whether we are happy or not. I'd certainly be a lot happier if he stopped wasting my taxes on daft things.

For reasons of foolishness, I originally wrote Lord 'King' rather than 'Young'. Thanks to Kynon for pointing this out.
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Even More Protests!

Posted on 02:55 by Unknown
Every time we see students vandalising police vans and fighting with the Police (safe in the knowledge that ours are not allowed to respond like they would in any other country), more and more people just think:

"Sod them. I don't want to pay more taxes so they can lie around watching daytime TV and talking rubbish."

Some great quotes from students yesterday:

Girl with funny coloured hair: "We deserve the right to be able to get an education for ourselves to our fullest potential!"

Yoof in shell suit: "We voted for Nick Clegg and he's turned round and slammed it in our face!"

And best of all, this tremendous chant from a group seeking to overturn the laws of Physics:

Student Grant: "What do we want?"
Followers/Future shelf stackers: "A future!"

Student Grant: "When do we want it?"
Followers "Now!"

Full credit to the girls who tried to stop the Police van from being trashed though.

ps What is this 'kettling' that we keep hearing about? Is it the same as 'cottaging'?
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Wednesday, 24 November 2010

Ski Season in Austria

Posted on 23:55 by Unknown
If anybody fancies spending the winter in an Austrian ski resort, with blue skies, snow and plenty of sunshine rather than grey skies, wind and lots of rain, then contact Yana at the address below. I have copied the email she sent me and the resort is Wildschonau, near Soll, Sheffau and Kitzbuhel.

I don't know her at all, so if she tells you that you have won the Nigerian State Lottery and asks you for your bank details, PIN number and mother's maiden name then that's your lookout.
postmaster@yanarichardson.com

We run a hotel in a ski resort in the winter in Austria. We also run a ski race academy for children from the age of 8-13/14.
We are currently in need of a teacher to tutor these children (the class number will vary from week to week - could be one on one or as many as 6-8 pupils) on a weekly basis from the second week in January though to the end of March.
We are happy for the successful candidate to spend the whole winter in resort from December through to April should this suit. Having employed a teacher previously, the hours are more or less each afternoon , Monday to Friday for around 12 weeks of the season. There was plenty of time for skiing or snowboarding.
We run a happy and relaxed team who all work very hard to achieve the fabulous reputation we have earned over the last eight years.
We hope you can help.
Thank you in advance.
Kind regards

Yana
Read More
Posted in | No comments

More Protests

Posted on 14:13 by Unknown
Great footage on the news of some Student Grant complaining that 'Our rights have been impeded upon'. No doubt he was studying English at some bizarre institution.

What I haven't heard is anybody saying the obvious:

"Let's just pay for the clever ones to study sensible subjects"


Read More
Posted in | No comments

Tuesday, 23 November 2010

Ofsted

Posted on 23:56 by Unknown
"Too many lessons are dull and uninspiring" says schools inspection agency, Ofsted today. When you look at the detail, it emerges that half of all lessons were judged to be better than 'satisfactory' and obviously the other half were either satisfactory or worse. (So it's possible that 100% were 'satisfactory' or better)

Anybody judging a large number of anythings, whether they are marrows or lessons will pre decide an average grade (ie satisfactory) as you look a bit silly if you always judge things to be 'excellent' or 'rubbish'.

The worst case conclusion from these results is that half of lessons are better than average and half are worse. Well I'd never have worked that one out. What a great use of public money.

I'll go through Ofsted's criteria for judging lessons in the near future (and if you're the parent of a bright kid, you will be horrified).
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Royal Wedding

Posted on 10:06 by Unknown
I think that over the next five months I am going to get heartily sick of hearing about the Royal Wedding.
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Monday, 22 November 2010

Gill Goodswen

Posted on 12:38 by Unknown
When I heard that Gill Goodswen had become the new President of the National Union of Teachers, I couldn't remember where I'd heard her name before. Then it came to me. She was the Headmistress who heroically took a stand on one of the biggest issues in education today- ie the urgent need to change the words in traditional children's stories in order to avoid offending Muslims (who aren't offended and frankly couldn't care less according to their own leader Ibrahim Mogra)

Anyway she has just signed a statement backing the planned walkouts by the kids on Wednesday to protest about Universities being allowed to charge up to £9000. This does seem a bit odd for the leader of a couple of hundred thousand teachers who presumably will have to deal with the consequences of all these kids wandering around the playground chanting slogans and singing songs (not Three Little Pigs hopefully).

I'll repeat my usual statement:

Why can't we have a sliding scale of further education grants, so we pay for the cleverest and not the dimwits? Like any idea, it is prejudiced against some group but I'd rather it was the clown doing Media Studies than the bright spark doing Physics.
Read More
Posted in | No comments

British Summer Time

Posted on 00:00 by Unknown
I have had enough of this winter already, you get halfway through the afternoon and it starts to go dark. Lets have British Double Summer Time where we keep our clocks one hour ahead of GMT in the winter, so it never gets dark before five pm and two hours ahead in the Summer. (Who needs it to be getting light at 4 am?)

I thought this was a new idea but it was first tried for five years from 1940-1945 during World War Two and between 1968 and 1971 we tried staying on British Summer Time all year round.

I'm tempted to take unilateral action if the Government won't do it.
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Saturday, 20 November 2010

League Tables

Posted on 12:33 by Unknown
Announcing in a comprehensive school staffroom that you think the School League Tables are a tremendous idea, elicits roughly the same response as declaring that you collect Nazi memorabilia or have a bit of a crush on David Cameron. One thing that unites public sector teachers above anything else is that the tables are a BAD thing.

Unfortunately almost all parents think that they are a very GOOD thing.

So who is right?

My view is that although they do not give a perfect comparison of schools, as they can be fiddled slightly (by concentrating the best teachers and resources on the c/d borderline kids and entering pupils for even easier GCSE 'equivalents', the bottom line is that they are better than no comparison at all. After all most parents are only comparing a small number of potential schools in a limited area, who will use similar tricks to boost their results and if one school is significantly better than another then this will show up.

One of the reasons that we are no longer taken seriously as a profession is that we refuse to accept any form of accountability. The League Tables could be improved and we should be the ones pointing out exactly how this could be done, rather than simply rejecting any form of comparison out of hand.



Read More
Posted in | No comments

Monday, 15 November 2010

Primary Schools and Snow

Posted on 09:36 by Unknown
Winter is just round the corner and that special day will soon be upon us. Yes the day when it snows a bit and loads of schools close, giving the media a chance to claim that all teachers are bone idle.

Now if we leave Secondary Schools out of the equation (assuming that kids over 11 can look after themselves at home until their parents return from work) we are left with the problem of a Primary School closing. This is almost always due to not having the minimum legal number of teachers per pupil and it brings absolute havoc because of course, one parent must then stay at home to look after a child between 4 and 11. Either the parent or their employer must bear this cost, which is huge and completely unnecessary.

The solution is simple and obvious. Every teacher should register with the Primary school nearest to them and make their way there (with photo ID) if they are unable to get to their own school. Pre registering would do away with any identification/CRB check excuses and if there are still problems with teacher numbers then they can be sorted out well in advance. All that is needed is to keep the children occupied for the day and if the primary schools drew up a bad weather program in advance, then it's perfectly straightforward. Teachers would be hailed as saving the day rather than sleeping the day.

Why is this not done? Councils can't be bothered and the Teachers Unions would come up with some utterly farcical objections. Why not do the decent thing and ask your nearest Primary school if you can help out on the big day? (Remember though, a snowman competition is no longer allowed due to the all-white nature of the entries)

Read More
Posted in | No comments

Sunday, 14 November 2010

School Funding

Posted on 23:46 by Unknown
The Government wants to fund schools directly, rather than the current method of giving the money to Local Councils, who syphon some off to pay for Black History Month, trips to cities they are twinned with and their additional level of bureaucracy, before allocating what's left on a random basis.

The idea was roundly criticised by the teaching unions, which is further evidence that it's probably a good idea.

Read More
Posted in | No comments

Friday, 12 November 2010

Do NOT stone Yasmin Alibhai-Brown

Posted on 04:19 by Unknown
I repeat- do NOT stone Yasmin Brown whatever you do, and more importantly do not under any circumstances suggest that I told you to.

Birmingham councillor Gareth Compton made a poor joke (although who am I to judge the quality of somebody else's humour?) by Twittering the following:

"Can someone please stone Yasmin Alibhai-Brown to death? I shan't tell
Amnesty if you don't. It would be a blessing, really"

He has been arrested and released on bail. Whether he will be charged remains to be seen.

I do think that this affair raises questions about being offended and freedom of speech, as does the case of accountant Paul Chambers who texted jokingly about blowing up Doncaster Airport when it closed because of snow and lost his job as a result.

Here's a few questions that spring to mind:

1) If a comment is clearly not a serious threat (ie if Gareth Compton doesn't make a habit of calling for his opponents to be murdered and Paul Chambers' flat was not filled with explosives, detonators and books urging terrorist attacks) then should they really be arrested and have their careers ruined?

2) Is there a difference between comments made in private and those made in public?

3) If so, then where does the boundary lie? Where do emails, letters, blogs and Twitter fit into this?

4) Did the Police arrest these men for inciting Allah to burn British soldiers yesterday?










5) What will I do when all the people I've written nasty things about send the Police round to take me away?
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Thursday, 11 November 2010

Joyce Walters

Posted on 14:18 by Unknown
Mad payouts like this and this are just gifts to those who think that the public sector is living on a different planet.

£20 million paid in compensation claims to teachers last year. What has happened to our profession?
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Wednesday, 10 November 2010

Black Boys

Posted on 23:41 by Unknown
Katharine Birbalsingh, (the teacher who looks like the girl on Crystal Tipps and Alistair) recently made the point that black boys are often let down at school.

On average, the black boys I taught behaved far worse than the white ones and had more of a 'chip on their shoulder' attitude. Whilst this is partly due to their family backgrounds being on average less stable and being closer to a 'street culture' of crime and drugs, I believe that it is mainly because no white teacher ever dared to discipline them for fear of being accused of racism, which is the worst thing that can happen to you in teaching. Far better to have robbed a bank or mugged an old lady.

From the day they start school, allowances are made for the black boys and they are punished less harshly and less frequently than the white boys for the same misbehaviour. Kids very quickly work out where their boundaries are and behave accordingly.

Don't forget though, that this is a completely taboo topic in schools. Bringing it up is roughly equivalent to putting a giant Swastika up in your classroom, goose stepping down the corridors and shouting out "Sieg Heil!" when the Head walks into assembly.
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Clashes at Student Fees Protest

Posted on 14:19 by Unknown
The huge increase in Degree fees is very unfair. Well it's unfair to the clever students who would have got to University at any time in the last 30 years. Why on Earth should they have to subsidise a load of drongos who can barely read or write but have been told by their schools that it is their right to go onto further education?

Charge the thickos and we will happily pay for the bright sparks.
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Haile Gebrselassie

Posted on 04:49 by Unknown
As always, I'm a couple of days late with the news, but it's sad that I didn't notice the retirement of Haile Gebrselassie in the headlines. Not just for his 20 year career at the top of distance running where he won everything there was to win, but even more for his sportsmanship, respect for his rivals and being a thoroughly decent bloke. (His apology to Paul Tergat after shattering his record in the marathon sums him up)

Rather than spending his money on prostitutes, daft cars and cocaine, he has invested his energies in helping his home country of Ethiopia, setting up running clubs, schools and employing hundreds of locals in his clothing business. He must be one of the few sporting heroes that I've never heard anyone say a bad word about.

I won't mention the obvious sport that could benefit from having a few men like him.
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Tuesday, 9 November 2010

Shopping Around for Exam Boards

Posted on 23:39 by Unknown
I wrote about how schools shop around for exam boards that 'are most suited to their pupils' ie easiest, in my book (which you should buy today) and it looks like 5 Live have got round to reading it too.

Entering huge numbers of pupils for worthless qualifications which count as 4 GCSE's is a good trick but if a school is under pressure to improve their actual number of GCSE passes then they look for the board with the most modular courses (ie more opportunities to resit exams), plenty of coursework (which the pupils can be 'guided' on) and bizarre new subjects which the board is keen to promote (and therefore have a low pass mark). In the serious subjects, look for slight variants such as '21st Century Science'

Schools that need to improve will have all their best teachers taking the C/D borderline classes as there's no point in wasting them on the bright children or the ones who can't read.

Having more than one exam board introduces competition and you don't have to be a genius to work out what that does to exam standards.




Read More
Posted in | No comments

Michael Heseltine

Posted on 06:10 by Unknown
Michael Heseltine reckons that we should get retired army officers to sort out the discipline in schools. This is an old chestnut which gets aired every few years or so. Coincidentally, last weekend I spoke to a friend who had just left after 22 years service. He reckoned that he would last about 15 minutes as a state school teacher.

"Some kid would start mucking about, I'd tell them to stop, they would answer me back and I'd give them a slap..."

Hmmm. I'm afraid that idea's not going to work, Michael. You can't fight a battle if you are the only one who wants to.



Read More
Posted in | No comments

Monday, 8 November 2010

Lady Gaga

Posted on 00:40 by Unknown
We will never be able to compete with the United States if we are always playing catch-up. Can it really be true that none of our Universities offer the chance to study Lady Gaga?
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Sunday, 7 November 2010

Prisoners getting the vote

Posted on 14:23 by Unknown
I'm fine about prisoners being allowed to vote. I just want them to stay prisoners for a bit longer than the people in charge do.
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Work for Benefits

Posted on 05:12 by Unknown
The idea must be thirty years old by now, so why has it taken so long to start asking the long term unemployed to work for their money?
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

Gobbledygook

Posted on 15:22 by Unknown
I'm going to try and build up a comprehensive collection of nonsense education speak. The page will go up on the sidebar and will become a useful resource for any reader facing an interview for a position in Senior Management.

To start the ball rolling:

1) Performativity (the emphasis on achieving targets)

2) Dialogic teaching (having a chat with the kids)

3) Articulated progression (allowing pupils to choose their next step in the qualification system)

4) Level descriptor (the National Curriculum level of something)

I look forward to your contributions (but don't forget to say what they mean)
Read More
Posted in | No comments

Tuition Fees

Posted on 14:29 by Unknown
So it looks like University fees are going to rise to £9000 a year. Add say £3500 for rent each year and £4500 to live on, then after a three year degree students are going to leave owing about £50 000.

This is a frightening prospect for the ones who are doing a sensible subject, but for those on a Mickey Mouse course, it is utter madness. No school will tell them this beforehand however, because it is not in their interest. They know perfectly well that their Ofsted report will contain a simple percentage figure of pupils going into Higher education.


Read More
Posted in | No comments

Tuesday, 2 November 2010

Sheffield

Posted on 14:41 by Unknown
Whilst others might be worried about cuts, up in Sheffield the Socialist Republic has just spent £15 000 on a new logo for the city.

This is what they got for their money. Amazing, I'm sure you'll agree. Why did they not simply hold a competition in the local schools with a £250 prize for the winning effort?

Ah, I know- because it's not their own cash they are spending.

Read More
Posted in | No comments
Newer Posts Older Posts Home
View mobile version
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Downing St
    Chinese President, Hu Jintao has just delivered a large box of Viagra to 10 Downing St after hearing that Gordon Brown was having trouble wi...
  • International Aid
    How on Earth can we expect India to fund an £800 million space exploration programme if we're going to start penny-pinching and not send...
  • Julia Robinson- A Brave Woman
    It's rare that you find me using the words ' bravery ' and 'Headteacher' in the same sentence, but Sheffield Head Julia ...
  • Yellow is the Colour of my True Love's Hi Viz Jacket...
    Whilst driving through town today I noticed a group of about 20 schoolchildren all about 11 or 12 years old, getting on a bus. The sun was b...
  • Changes
    One of the fundamental changes I've seen in education is the change from learning facts, formulas and processes to investigating, design...
  • Science without the Science
    After looking through a popular syllabus for year 7 and 8 Science, one thing struck me as odd. There did not appear to be any Science in it...
  • Etape du Tour
    Imagine 10 000 people in a bike race on closed roads, with huge climbs and hair raising alpine descents. This was the ' Etape ' on S...
  • Primary School pupils not being stretched
    'Estyn' is the Welsh education watchdog. They have concluded that the most 'a ble and talented ' pupils in Welsh Primary sch...
  • Lessons
    Oh well, I've learnt my lesson- always beware of Geeks bearing gifts. Here's a puzzle somebody told me today- first one to solve it ...
  • Burn My Money in front of me Please
    Now that we are all heartily sick of hearing about MPs spending the taxpayers money on moats, duck islands and helipads why don't we l...

Categories

  • BlackBerry
  • Facebook
  • Google
  • Hotmail
  • iCloud
  • Live email
  • Microsoft account
  • None
  • PayPal
  • Twitter
  • UberSocial
  • YouVersion

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (36)
    • ►  July (6)
    • ►  June (20)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (1)
    • ►  March (7)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2012 (79)
    • ►  December (4)
    • ►  November (8)
    • ►  October (5)
    • ►  August (5)
    • ►  July (7)
    • ►  June (13)
    • ►  May (9)
    • ►  April (6)
    • ►  March (4)
    • ►  February (6)
    • ►  January (12)
  • ►  2011 (106)
    • ►  December (14)
    • ►  November (8)
    • ►  August (9)
    • ►  July (8)
    • ►  June (15)
    • ►  May (12)
    • ►  April (3)
    • ►  March (9)
    • ►  February (9)
    • ►  January (19)
  • ▼  2010 (191)
    • ►  December (8)
    • ▼  November (28)
      • Ballet Teacher
      • School report full of errors
      • Snow Closure
      • State School PE
      • Howard Flight and Lord Young
      • Even More Protests!
      • Ski Season in Austria
      • More Protests
      • Ofsted
      • Royal Wedding
      • Gill Goodswen
      • British Summer Time
      • League Tables
      • Primary Schools and Snow
      • School Funding
      • Do NOT stone Yasmin Alibhai-Brown
      • Joyce Walters
      • Black Boys
      • Clashes at Student Fees Protest
      • Haile Gebrselassie
      • Shopping Around for Exam Boards
      • Michael Heseltine
      • Lady Gaga
      • Prisoners getting the vote
      • Work for Benefits
      • Gobbledygook
      • Tuition Fees
      • Sheffield
    • ►  October (30)
    • ►  September (19)
    • ►  August (9)
    • ►  July (15)
    • ►  June (18)
    • ►  May (21)
    • ►  April (17)
    • ►  March (9)
    • ►  February (8)
    • ►  January (9)
  • ►  2009 (104)
    • ►  December (7)
    • ►  November (17)
    • ►  October (14)
    • ►  September (14)
    • ►  August (1)
    • ►  July (8)
    • ►  June (11)
    • ►  May (5)
    • ►  March (10)
    • ►  February (14)
    • ►  January (3)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile