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Bye Bye Vince

Vince Cable
RIP

Poor deluded fellow.
As if we care.

Mentions raising interest rates.
Warns of London being inhabited
by bankers and foreigners.
Wealthy ones though.
Not from Bulgaria or
any where like that.
(Must be poor and totally undesirable.)
Not that they actually want to come here!


Raise the rates
It’s the only way
So we pay for bailing them out.
We lose the NHS, Education, Libraries
Suffer food banks on a politically ignored scale.
Return the State to1948
Ignore the complexities of the 21st century
and
Now pay again so the bankers can have more
money to bet and gamble with
as reform there has been none.

Trust
Mr Cable
and
others of his ilk
will not survive
a
further
Poll



Vince Cable: interest rates may have to rise to combat housing boom
Business secretary warns of danger that London may be largely inhabited by 'foreigners and bankers' as house prices spiral

Patrick Wintour - Guardian 22/12/2013


Strike

This man just doesn’t garner trust.

Pasted Graphic

The head teacher’s gave him a vote of no confidence.


Headteachers pass vote of no confidence in education policies

Union delegates declare that Michael Gove's policies are not in the best interests of children, parents or schools

Guardian 18th May 2013


The Head of Magdalen College talks about
‘the long interfering arm and dead restraining hand’
and lack of ‘love’


Love has disappeared from state education, says private school leader

Tim Hands attacks obsession with school league tables and 'dead restraining hand' of government

Richard Adams Guardian 30/09/2013




Carol Ann Duffy and 200 others condemn education policy

Letter from authors and academics singles out increased focus on testing as damaging to children

Guardian 01/10/2013


Which wan’t the first time a group of a group of academics had the temerity to say he might be on the wrong track.

a letter published in the Independent, signed by 100 eminent academics and teachers, which is acutely critical of the proposed educational reforms. Referring to a recent CBI report (not known as a hotbed of Marxism), it notes the "need to end the culture of micro-management" in schools and (citing the Cambridge Primary Review) the propensity to value memorisation and recall over understanding and inquiry. The driver for Gove appears to be the PISA international tests where the UK is slipping in performance. Setting aside the debate about the true validity of this particular league table, the 100 academics make for me an unanswerable argument: "Schools in high-achieving Finland, Massachusetts and Alberta emphasise cognitive development, critical understanding and creativity, not rote learning."



Gove's Daily Mail column confirms he doesn't understand how learning works

Standards and rigour are not at odds with an education that values creative thinking, writes Tricia Kelleher

Guardian - Tricia Kelleher 09/04/2013


and now

Not prepared to discuss anything with the NUT or NASUWT.

and
so


Teachers strike born of anger and frustration, says NASUWT - video


How is it one man can cause so much anger?
Why is he allowed to do it?

Certainly from a Primary point of view it has felt we have been in limbo for the last five years.
Some thoughtful people at the
Cambridge Primary Review had designed an interesting curriculum fit for the twenty first century.
But the previous incumbents couldn’t quite accept the need for that degree of change.
Conservatives being of ‘right mind’ are even less likely to see the need for a radical change.


All we are left with is Rigour. In the form of 100% pass rate at level 4 ( although the current government is going to make every school decide what a level 4 is and give no indication how schools can achieve it.) 40% level 5 ( ditto) and probably 30% level 6. Although this remains to be seen because at the same time they are taking lots of yr7 objectives and dropping them into yr6 and thus pushing everything else down into earlier years, although they call it up.
(Don’t you just love decomposition in Yr3.)
This is only for English and Maths, which one suspects could well be the Primary Curriculum very soon.
+
Of course the statutory 2hrs of PE and of course Computing.
And
Intervention, Intervention, Intervention
for this who are not managing all this.

Thus we have a curriculum of Reading, Riting and Rithmatic in Primary Schools for the 21st Century .

Heh Ho!

Still we keepp battling on and hope that eventually we will have an education secretary
who has a brighter vision for Pirmary Education.

Which leads to the people who wrote the Cambridge Primary Review again.

Eight priorities to improve primary education

In a recent speech, Cambridge Primary Review Trust chair,
Robin Alexander set out eight priorities for primary education. Do you share this vision?

Guardian - Robin Alexander 04/10/ 2013







Mrs Thatcher

Why does Mrs Thatcher deserve a ceremonial funeral?
Full military honours and all guns blazing.
A thing of imperial past
and largely undeserving.
Is this what makes Britain great?
Rewarding people when they are so right!

Remember
She divided and ruled
Caused agony and despair
Spent all the oil money
Sold off all the gold and silver
Imploded our country to the
‘Big Bang’

How many hours did they need to
whitewash this legacy?
Actually quite few.
More than any previous Prime Minister.

It didn’t work
We have a National Health Service that treats millions of people every year without charge.
We have a State Education Service that educates millions of children
and young people every year. That despite all the rhetoric is about as ‘good as it gets’.
We have a Public Sector that provide millions of people with essential services every year.
It certainly tries to makes ‘work pay’ through the benefits system.
We have gay marriage.
There is no capital punishment.
Countless changes in societal beliefs and mores.

In many ways there is no legacy.
Britain is more resilient.
Society wants these things and more.
Even in the face of there not being one.

So
No!

Listen to society.
Go quietly to your grave
without pomp and circumstance.








April 1st

April 1st 2013
The coalition of the nasty.
Just got nastier.
The Bedroom PollTax moment.

Attack this. Blame that.


Attack the poor.
Attack the disabled.
Attack care services for the elderly.
Attack the NHS.
Attack the taxes of the wealthy (not pay as much)
Attack legal aid.
Attack the funding of council tax benefits.

Blame the immigrants.
Blame the poor.

They really like to kick a person when they are down.

And the dear old work and pensions says he could live on
the £53 per week of lowest rate jobseekers allowance.
Well as he is the chief job seeker in the country
(Work and Pension Secretary)
perhaps he should pay himself £53 a week until he’s found all
those jobs that people need to start paying taxes to solve
the manufactured debt crisis.

Sheer Ineptitude.
Or just plain Nasty.
A toxic synergy more likely.
Keep cutting
(More suffer)
and yet
they are still borrowing more.
(A few make a killing)
both metaphorical and actual.

But then again,
they rest assured in the knowledge
that Britain has run a national debt for more than 300 years
and
has not defaulted in all that time.
So what gives.

Every one except for them.






The day Britain changes: welfare reforms and coalition cuts take effect
A new world heaves into view this week with sweeping changes in the fields of welfare, justice, health and tax

Patrick Wintour - Guardian 01/04/2013



The National Debt in Perspective.
by Robert Neild
Royal Economic Society


List of countries by public debt
Wikipedia

UK National Debt
Tejvan Pettinger - March 22 - 2013


Iain Duncan Smith: I could live on £53 in benefits a week
Work and pensions secretary says he would be able to survive on lowest rate of jobseeker's allowance given to adults under 25