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Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post
I'm sure that there must be lots of material available, but it needs to be sorted into some readily accessible place for teachers to tap into, without them having to reinvent the wheel for every piece of work they set.
And of course we need adequate provision of home resources (devices and internet connection) for the students.
My godson's brother's children (both primary school age) in Australia have been undergoing a regular six-hour day of home learning in their lockdown (including breaks/playtime). I imagine that only private schools here have had anything remotely similar (but would happily be proved wrong).
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostMy godson's brother's children (both primary school age) in Australia have been undergoing a regular six-hour day of home learning in their lockdown (including breaks/playtime). I imagine that only private schools here have had anything remotely similar (but would happily be proved wrong).
The idea that remote learning/teaching is a soft option and can be easily managed, and is a cheap thing to do, needs to be checked out.
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"Remote learning" only works for some things, and some people.
Sadly the people who benefit most from school are likely to be the ones who are unable to access it.
But the likes of Gove don't give a toss about those children anyway
Interesting that the schools the politicians send their children to aren't due to open until September.
This is a real opportunity for an examination of what school is for IMV
but, sadly, one that will be missed entirely
One of the things I did last week was a long interview with a researcher at Tokyo University who is looking at how music education works in various parts of the world. It seems that the really interesting questions and possible ways to work are all happening elsewhere.......
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI think it has turned out to be a lot harder than people anticipated. Some teachers have been teaching remotely for weeks, and apparently it's very hard work. OK - it wouldn't be fun for most of us having to deal with a class of kids who were often on the edge of running riot, in a school situation - and then of course there is the preparation and learning required - but apparently some teachers doing the remote learning are now finding that they get hundreds of emails per day, including some - possibly thoughtless ones - from parents concerned how things are going. That's not to knock the parents - but to highlight that remote learning needs to be managed carefully, just as with face to face teaching.
The idea that remote learning/teaching is a soft option and can be easily managed, and is a cheap thing to do, needs to be checked out.
If I were a university student about to start a course in September 2020, I'd certainly want to know that my £9000 fee was being well spent.
In terms of primary school children, I was thinking more, perhaps, of an opportunity for them to start to learn a foreign language or even touch typing; there must be some decent accredited courses that could be tapped into. The Year 5 teacher I have worked with has been pointing his students to some 'bite-size' BBC learning clips/activities, which seem to have gone down well.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View Post
If I were a university student about to start a course in September 2020, I'd certainly want to know that my £9000 fee was being well spent.
Often the finances are such that in fact even £9000 isn't really enough, but for the coming session it may turn out to be poor value. Normally of course, students concerned about that sort of issue could take a gap year - but I fear that isn't going to be a realistic option for a while, so either the students or the universities - and in practice both - will suffer. There presumably aren't going to be the hordes of incomng foreign (even EU ...) students coming in to make up the funding deficits.
These are not good times - but at least most young people still have lives before them, and hopefully things can only get better.
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....better satire than Brooker.....
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/may/15/zoom-dog-groom-how-stay-alert-covid-19-boris-johnsonThe confusion sown by Boris Johnson has spread to Covid-19 testing and beyond
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post
Typical. Boris has always got someone else to pick up the shit.
Maybe, just maybe, he won't be able to duck the issues quite so much in the coming days, though.
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This is a response by a writer friend of mine to the Guardian article (he went to Oxford and is published by Faber so has the cred )
“If you really care about children, you’ll want them in schools.” Absolutely fuck right off, Gove, you despicable, gaslighting little titmouse. As if you or your party give a shit about children; you just want the parents back on the treadmill of the economy, which, being Tories, you value a hell of a lot higher than the the welfare and benefit of society. We'd send our kids back to school if only schools weren't mortal fucking danger zones, thanks to the the criminal, worldbeating negligence of your party. "Staggering"? The only staggering thing is that you think anyone would trust you with the wellbeing of their kids after the colossal, disgraceful balls up your government have made of this pandemic. Fuck right off to hell."
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI couldn't possibly comment.
Often the finances are such that in fact even £9000 isn't really enough, but for the coming session it may turn out to be poor value. Normally of course, students concerned about that sort of issue could take a gap year - but I fear that isn't going to be a realistic option for a while, so either the students or the universities - and in practice both - will suffer. There presumably aren't going to be the hordes of incomng foreign (even EU ...) students coming in to make up the funding deficits.
These are not good times - but at least most young people still have lives before them, and hopefully things can only get better."I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostCan't see much wrong with this ?
An act that would inspire confidence maybe ?
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostPlenty wrong with it. For a start, each boy has his own room, so there is considerably less difficulty in practising 'social distancing'. So might offer a false sense of security to other institutions where boarders share a dormitory. The Wall Game might take out a few, come November, I suppose.
BUT the other one doing the rounds suggests that it's safe to send you children back to school after parliament has been sitting for a couple of months without cases.
Now that Scotland isn't available as the "testing ground" (as Steve Bell used to put it) it seems that others will have to fulfil that role.
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