Posts Tagged ‘politics’

A ConDem cut which is actually good

Friday, July 9th, 2010

Midway through my time as an undergraduate history student in York, I decided to volunteer in a local primary school. Very shortly after, I decided that teaching was actually the career for me. I’ve never looked back since, but from the very beginning my fledgling career has been plagued by CRB forms. The Criminal Records Bureau must have at least a desk drawer’s worth of forms which I’ve returned, and I’ve only been in education or childcare for three years or so.

On my last weekday of leisure before I take up my teaching post on Monday, I sit here gleefully filling in yet another form for the beloved CRB. As ever, certain parts of it are baffling to those without an NVQ in Filling in of CRB Forms. Here’s me, with no formal training in filling in CRB forms, utterly perplexed by whether or not I am registering for the Independent Safeguarding Authority.

It’s not a long section, but I’d hate to have to fill in the whole form again because of an unawareness that I actually do need to register for it. As with most problems, I figure that the solution is to Google it, and Google it I did.

The first message on the homepage of this ISA thing is to inform the reader that the Vetting and Barring Scheme – which is by and large the only thing the ISA seems to do – has been halted by the coalition government’s plans to reform the CRB checking procedure into something less ridiculous. With that in mind, I’ve put a big fat ‘X’ in the box saying that I’m not registering for the presumably-soon-to-be-defunct authority.

For all of the coalition’s evils, I can’t say I disagree with this one. Stoopid CRB forms.

Michael Gove sets a good example. (Yes, you read right)

Friday, July 9th, 2010

Michael Gove has had a tough week. Amidst his ever-emerging plans to cut expenditure in state education, he made an error. If one were weighing up the scale of the error against the question “how sizeable was this error?”, the answer would at least be “moderately sizeable”.

When Labour were in power, they promised that schools would be able to rebuild and refurbish their premises to provide the high level of education expected of them. Under the coalition government, they have been told that it would probably be impossible for them to do so.

A document was produced listing the schools which would not be able to proceed with redevelopment, causing those happily omitted from it to celebrate. As it emerged, this document contained many errors, and the celebration from some schools would turn out to be misfounded.

This error, which Michael Gove had responsibility for, rather angered some people.

The anger is understandable. Many schools need the funds to rebuild or redevelop facilities which cannot cope with the demands placed on them. Alongside other cuts to essentials such as the provision of Teaching Assistants and the financial implications of NOT becoming an academy, this is disastrous news for many schools.

One MP in the House of Commons was particularly angry. Tom Watson, Labour MP for West Bromwich East, was particularly so. In a verbal onslaught in front of a packed House of Commons, he responded to Gove’s apology by labelling him a ‘miserable pipsqueak’ at the top of his voice. It’s worth a watch.

As regular readers of my Gove-related posts (and those unfortunate enough to hear me talk at them) will know, I’m not a fan of Michael Gove’s policies. I believe the academies plan would be harmful to state schooling. I believe that choosing not to extend provision of free school meals is a mistake. I believe that a return to ‘the basics’ is a near-jurassic way to view the priorities of primary education. On this occasion however, I will defend him.

Anyone in a position of authority should be responsible, and accept that they are a role model for others. Michael Gove, being in charge of education, must be particularly angelic in his conduct. In apologising for an error he made, with sincerity whilst others jeered at him, he did something which was difficult but correct.

Tom Watson acted in a way which set a poor example. He raised his voice in order to point and jeer his insult across the Commons, in a way that a playground bully might wish to humiliate their victim in front of their peers. This is a dreadful example, and teachers would expect pupils to behave in a more respectful way from the very start of their schooling.

The speaker duly asked him to retract his comment, which he did only out of ‘deference to the speaker’. Frankly, he should have done it out of respect to the insulted individual, who deserves to be able to work without being childishly mocked. I am astounded that a man of Watson’s expertise would consider this acceptable.

A pupil in school who attempted to resolve a dispute in this way would spend a considerable time afterwards comtemplating his actions, and living with the implications of acting in such a way. Maybe we need to send a letter home to Mr Watson’s parents, or consider that he should spend his next few breaktimes reflecting on his behaviour.

With honourable restraint, Gove said that he understood Watson’s passion.

By all means, if Michael Gove’s policies are ill-advised (and I rather think they are), they should be scrutinised and deconstructed. However, if he makes a mistake and apologises for it, we should have the good grace to accept it and continue with the important task of building an ever-improving state educational system.

The next few years will be tough for all of us involved in state education, and we need to reserve our energies for constructive criticism and exemplary practice.

Lies, Damned Lies, and Michael Gove’s statistics

Monday, July 5th, 2010

So many modern Conservatives idolise Benjamin Disraeli, the nineteenth century dandy-turned-statesman, who supposedly first remarked about the ‘three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics’. I have no idea if our Minister for Education, Michael Gove, is of the Disraeli-worshipping cult, but he knows a thing or two about massaging statistics and validating Dizzy’s observation.

One of his key policies has been to urge ‘outstanding’ schools, as defined by Ofsted, to become an academy. Academies operate with more freedom from their Local Education Authority, and can be run by private groups. Although they are not currently able to do so, Michael Gove has stated that he has ‘no ideological objection’ to them making a profit as they do so.

Indeed, such has been his zeal to persuade them that each outstanding school has received a phone call from the DfE to persuade them of the benefits of doing so. But alas, a cheeky discrepancy was present which Michael Gove has used to make his ideas seem far more popular than they may be amongst headteachers.

Many headteachers, being open-minded and conscientious, will have requested information about becoming an academy simply in order to keep abreast of what the government’s plans seem to be. I daresay that some will have done this knowing that they would never intend to become an academy, but it is simply good practice to see what direction educational policy keeps taking.

However, in order to request any information about this process, you had to ‘declare an interest’ (in the government’s words), and alas, any school which simply wanted to know about the plans had effectively ‘declared an interest in becoming an academy’, and are used in Michael Gove’s statistics to indicate the popularity of his plans.

This, Mr. Gove, is cheeky. Funnily enough, educational professionals tend to be rather clever, and notice this kind of sly trick. It is not appreciated. In future, I think it would be more advisable to conduct himself with the honesty and integrity which we expect our pupils to display on a daily basis.

Has Michael Gove done his maths?

Monday, July 5th, 2010

In the months running up to the election, I was to be heard arguing that the grim possibility of Michael Gove being in charge of education was reason enough to make sure that we would not have a Conservative government.

Amidst the uncertainty following the election results, there were rumours that we would avoid this dire situation: Michael Gove himself stated that he would be willing to forego a cabinet post, and there were rumours that David Laws was all set to take charge of education. In hindsight, Laws would presumably not have lasted anyhow.

Confirmation came soon enough – and I remember being sat on a train in Kings Lynn station when I heard the news – that Michael Gove would indeed be the head honcho of educational policy for the foreseeable future. I was tempted to hold a memorial service for primary education there and then.

After all of this, I couldn’t help but feel that he started fairly well. Although I didn’t think it necessary to wholly rebrand the Department for Children, Schools and Families, at least the Department For Education is easy to remember and to-the-point.

What’s more, the General Teaching Council (GTC) didn’t seem to be doing a wonderful job as an independent regulatory body, and they were axed. Even the unions agreed that this was fair.

There was also a very brief period in which all of Michael Gove’s bizarre talk of free schools and academies seemed to have died down, and it looked as though his oddball scheme might be lost to ConDem compromise. This would have been no bad thing, but alas, like a persistent fungal infection, it has made an unpleasant return.

Conservative MPs often have a more traditional notion of education, and insist on emphasising the importance of ‘the basics’, a.k.a. ‘the three Rs’ (reading, writing and arithmetic). You’d think therefore that Michael Gove would have done the maths behind his scheming, but it seems increasingly as though he did not.

An article on the BBC website today talks of his announcement that plans to rebuild and refurbish schools are, by and large, being scrapped. In this article, it notes that the average cost of refurbishing a school is £4 million. This seems a tad hefty, until you consider the cost of building a whole new school, which is exactly what would need doing in each instance of somebody taking Gove up on his free school offer. A new school, it seems, tends to cost £25 million.

You do the maths; I’m not sure Gove bothered to.Free schools are far from free, and cutting the extension of free school lunches for poorer families will not cover this expenditure, let alone its gross unfairness.

Two big questions remain for Michael Gove and his free school plan. Firstly: Where will the money come from? Many people involved with education would argue that funding priorities lie elsewhere, and after all, government departments are supposed to be cutting back. Secondly: Why bother? There is plenty of evidence to suggest that free schools do not provide better education than our existing ones.

Mr. Gove, I await your answers.

Mediawatch: In defence of IDS

Saturday, July 3rd, 2010

My thoughts go out to Iain Duncan Smith tonight because, if I were him, I’d be feeling rather frustrated. Over the last week, he has been grossly misquoted and misrepresented by media and politicians alike.

Speaking as an ardent socialist, I naturally believe that there are plenty of evils associated with a Tory-led coalition, but Iain Duncan Smith is not one.  Few cabinet politicians, ever, have been as knowledgeable and astute as him in their field; few have been as fit for the post they are serving as IDS is for his.

Following years of research, IDS and others concluded that Britain’s workforce is too static. That is to say, people remain unemployed because there is not enough of an incentive for them to leave their immediate locality and attempt to find work. A return bus ticket can become an unjustifiable expense.

He has been talking of the need to make it socially and financially viable for people to get to a workplace, or even move house if they are prepared to do so. But only if they wish to.

This has been wildly misconstrued, completely deliberately, to suggest that IDS believes the unemployed are too indolent to get a job, and must be coerced into moving house to fill a vacant job position.

Take a look at the Mirror’s coverage – see ‘Work Secretary Iain Duncan Smith unveils extreme Norman Tebbit-style policy for jobless‘ and ‘Iain Duncan Smith’s advice to struggling families: Let them wear hand-me downs‘. The former even attempts to use a distant familial connection to Princess Diana on his part to indicate that he is of a class which does not care for the ordinary British citizen.

I suppose we expect this of the media; tabloids routinely wholly fabricate stories or construct extreme arguments which are distantly grounded in a mere slither of truth.

But we should expect better of senior Labour politicians. This is Ed Balls’s reaction to IDS’s argument:

“The remarks suggest that he’s thinking of taking away the housing tenure, the right to a social house and saying you’ve got to move.

So actually he’s going further than saying on your bike. It’s on your bike and lose your home.”

Here, we witness Ed Balls lying. This is simply NOT what Duncan Smith is saying, and is not even close. It is despicable that he and his shadow cabinet colleagues would dare to suggest this, and proof that Labour have a long way to go before learning why they have been booted out of power.

Thank god for the Independent, who remain true to their name. In an article entitled ‘Mr Duncan Smith deserves a hearing‘, they offer a brief and balanced analysis of what was actually being said.

Having heard (in person) Duncan-Smith’s argument and knowing about his years of work with the Institute of Social Justice, having witnessed his genuine sincerity and desire for social justice, I am absolutely appalled by the way that media and senior politicians have knowingly and misleadingly portrayed him as a snobbish tyrant.

The attacks on IDS represent exactly the kind of tribalist and pointless partisan politicking which actually prevents social progress in the UK. Labour politicians need to have the integrity to admit that he knows his stuff (which some will actually do); the media should have the integrity to represent him fairly; and the public need to see through this and understand the truth of his remarks.

Iain Duncan-Smith is a man with integrity, intelligence, and a desire to improve the lives of Britain’s less well off. He deserves the trust of the public, and should be left to do his job, free of this bullshit.

Homosexuality and Political Office

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Today I have spent some time reading Welcome to Everytown: A Journey Into The English Mind by Julian Baggini. In the book, he uses his experience of living for six months in England’s most typical postcode in order to make sense of the English mindset.

His experience and reflections are often insightful, but one observation seemed particularly apt in light of recent political events. Consider this:

It’s easy to think that homophobia is a thing of the past, like racism. But both assumptions are demonstrably false. Things have certainly got better, but true equality is still elusive, Britain didn’t get an openly gay member of parliament until Chris Smith in 1984, and it is still common for gay politicians to hide their sexuality. Nor can you blame them. A BBC poll showed that 39% disapprove of homosexuals in high office, and only 48% approve. There is clearly a religious factor hereL 44% of religious people disapproved compared to 26% of those with no religion, But either way, it is a very large number of people for a supposedly tolerant society.

David Laws was recently forced to admit his own sexuality following revelations about his parliamentary expenses. It’s a shame that he felt he ought to cover it up in the first place, as you’d hope that it would be nothing to be ashamed of. Financial wrongdoing aside, it is lamentable that anyone might feel they need to conceal their sexuality from those known to them, or to the wider public.

You’d hope that we, as a society, will become increasingly tolerant to the point where it simply won’t matter.

***

(Welcome To Everytown is written by Julian Baggini, and was first published by Granta in 2001. The extract above was taken from p.89 of the hardback edition).

Learnt about the New Primary Curriculum? Unlearn it.

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Michael Gove has been quick to act since becoming the Secretary of State for Education. Almost immediately, the Department for Children, Schools and Families was rebranded from its friendly rainbow logo to a sterner-looking Department for Education one.

DCSF logo

DCSF logo (out with the old)

DfE logo (in with the new)

DfE logo (in with the new)

Shortly after this, Gove went on a quango extermination programme, witnessing the deaths of the General Teaching Council, Becta (a technology in education thing) and the QCDA.

GTC logo (Byebye GTC)

GTC logo (Byebye GTC)

Becta logo (So long, Becta)

Becta logo (So long, Becta)

QCDA logo (Adieu, QCDA)

QCDA logo (Adieu, QCDA)

All of which was not truly disastrous – none of this would necessarily affect teaching too much, and could be confined to restructuring in the upper echelons of state education management.

But today something more irritating happened. Let me explain something I did first – I compiled a ‘medium term plan’ based on what the children would be learning and how it ties in with the curriculum. I did this during half term. I used the ‘New Primary Curriculum’, which was released this year.

Big mistake. Having literally handed in the plan today, I’ve managed to hand in the plan on the same day of the curriculum it was based on being axed. Going to the website of the New Primary Curriculum today, I was met with this:

Ministers confirmed on 7 June 2010 that they will not proceed with the last Government’s proposed new primary curriculum, which was based on a review led by Sir Jim Rose. The new curriculum was due to be taught in schools from September 2011, but the relevant clause in the Children, Schools and Families Bill did not successfully pass through the last Parliament.

Information about the new primary curriculum has been removed from this site.

Bummer. Michael Gove has to be careful now; he’s starting to mess with what teachers are spending their time trying to do – teach. It’s hard to predict what he’ll do next. We shall see.

A little thing I made

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

Lately I’ve been involving myself with The Green Party’s campaign to have Tony Juniper elected as MP for Cambridge in the coming general election. I’ve done all sorts of stuff, from cutting up sheets of bike stickers to doorstep canvassing – well, that’s essentially the lot. The campaign is gathering real momentum, and a recent survey by the local newspaper shows that voters think The Green Party are most likely to win the seat.

The good thing about helping The Green Party is the amount of encouragement you get from members of the public, who appreciate a political party with a clean record and a genuine interest in fairness. Plenty of events are put together by people who want to help out, including things like musical sets.

One such gig is coming up, and I was asked for some input on designing the poster for it. I gave it my best shot, and here it is:

I reckon that’s a reasonable effort for an amateur such as myself. Apparently, this is the one they’re going with. Not too shabby, eh!

Negative political campaigning in Cambridge: compare and contrast

Friday, March 19th, 2010

In the general election which is now just weeks away, I will be exercising my vote, and I will do so by voting for Tony Juniper’s campaign to become a Green Party MP for Cambridge.

One of the reasons I am fond of their outlook is that they try not to involve themselves with the negative and bitter style of politics which the other three main parties can seem intent on adopting. A brief viewing of Prime Minister’s Questions (http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006nldz) will give an idea of what I am talking about.

It doesn’t seem unfair to suggest that the Punch and Judy style of politics, which is about smarmy jeering, remains too prevalent. I seem to remember David Cameron once pledging to move away from this (see penultimate paragraph of a Telegraph article of his in 2005), and it is sadly also filtering down to the campaigns of Labour, the Lib Dems and the Tories in Cambridge.

A recent post from the Labour candidate, Daniel Zeichner, states “Lib Dems in chaos on Higher Education funding“. The conservative candidate, Nick Hillman, states “Lib Dem muddle over ‘backroom deals“. Meanwhile, the Lib Dems themselves, via their own candidate (Julian Huppert), opted to use that misleading graph about which I wrote my previous blog post.

It is possible to critique the policies or campaigns of other parties without resorting jibes like this, which come across as cheap. This is what the Green Party are uniquely trying to achieve during their campaign in Cambridge. To me, this is the kind of positive change that we really need to be voting for.

I hope other people join me in voting Green in Cambridge, and think that many will.

The Cambridge Lib Dems’ bitter campaign ought to alienate undecided voters

Friday, March 19th, 2010

When I got my hands on a local Lib Dem newsletter the other day, I could not help but feel profoundly disappointed.

In a prominent position, they opted to feature this graph:

The statistics used for this graph come from the 2005 election (available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/vote2005/html/116.stm). Since 2005, the Green Party have understandably grown as a movement and as a serious voting option. Using a five-year old statistic does not seem a fair description of the current political outlook, especially in Cambridge.

After all, the election results in 2001 saw Labour command a 20% lead over the Liberal Democrats in the constituency. The Lib Dems in Cambridge, of all people, are aware of the political change which can occur within one term.

Perhaps the fact that they feel the need to publicly attack the Greens is telling in its own right. They must feel threatened. If the Greens can’t win, why didn’t the Lib Dems focus instead on the merits of their own policies? If the Greens literally cannot win, there is surely no point whatsoever in mentioning them.

Compare it with the graph demonstrating swing in the 2008 European elections for Cambridge. No bitter remarks here, simply a positive comment about the Green party gains. Nobody is ruling anyone out of future elections unnecessarily.

My inclination to vote for Tony Juniper and the Green Party has been reinforced by the Lib Dem move to perpetuate this negative style of politics. As a potential Lib Dem voter, I would have hoped that they would attempt to conduct a campaign in a fresher and more positive manner, but they sadly seem content to stick to the derogatory mode of campaigning preferred by the two main parties.

I feel yet more justified in my decision to vote Green in the upcoming election, because they simply want to run a clean campaign talking about their own merits.