Body & Soul1 min ago
Charles Clarke or Charles Windsor?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Charles Windsor every time - as I said in a previous thread - I have interviewed someone for a secretarial job who had an A in GCSE English and could not differentiate between 'they're', 'their' and 'there'.
Whilst I think I may be setting myself up here (people can say that I have made plenty of spelling mistakes on my AB questions and answers) I do feel that I would be a little more pedantic on a typing test for an interview.
School sports days which are non-competitive.......
....only in England (or maybe Britain - I am not sure)
Until quite recently I taught an engineering subject to young people, supposedly the brighter ones. Many seemed to have no concept of even basic arithmetic. In calculating the Safe Working Load of a hoist for lifting small aircraft components out came the calculators. The answers ranged from 10 kgs to 1000 tonnes, yet none could see that the item was hardly likely to weigh more than 500 kgs. I ended up re-teaching arithmetic. (As well as how to hold a pen properly).
We are told that one in four British adults is functionally illiterate. In the Czech Republic less than 1% of the population are illiterate. In the Far East you see kids doing their homework even whilst helping their parents run market stalls in the evening. They are almost born with the will to learn.
In the end it's all due to the teachers being hamstrung by human rights and not able to enforce any discipline. Thus the classes sink to the level of the greatest disrupter. The rise of welfarism also plays a part - 'why should I learn? I won't starve if I learn nothing at school.'
CW might have Edwardian views on education (as well as no designer stubble), but he's right. Unless we can turn back the clock and re-introduce Edwardian values, which seems unlikely, then Britain is finished.
I think starting with changing the OFSTED inspections would be a good idea. Spontaneous tests would be much better than what they do. When i was at school, the teachers would plan the lessons for the inspections a long time before hand. Thus when the lessons inspections came round, the lessons were so well planned and the contents of the lesson was something that we knew like the back of our hands. Even the bad teachers looked good as a result. The teachers wouldn't be worrying for months in advance and the poorer quality teachers would be identified easier. Whilst there are a lot of kids out there who don;t deserve to be at school considering the way they behave, through personal experience, I can say that some of the teachers themselves need to retrain or change career paths. I also believe the reintroduction of Grammar Schools would help the better pupils too.
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