Archive for the 'Teaching in the UK' Category

10
Aug
11

The issue of accountability

(Some reworking of yesterday’s post here – apologies for the repetition)

I’m struggling with it. Accountability and responsibility both. Who is to blame for all of this? This is not to simply point fingers and shift the blame elsewhere – rather that we will be unable to suggest a progressive solution unless we can identify the problem.

I’m often assumed to be a good little leftie. And, while I’ll admit to reading the Guardian and voting red every time, those closer to me are sometimes shocked by what are referred to as ‘right-wing’ leanings… I don’t know. I think the left/right dichotomy is a red herring. That our opinions and beliefs are more complex than ‘x’or ‘y’.

I think that a society is responsible for nurturing it’s young. For raising children within a moral framework – a scaffold of discipline and rules that is gradually removed to leave an ethical structure ready to stand by itself. I think that we have failed to do so. We, as a people have dropped the ball and permitted a degradation of youth to go unchecked. At least my own experiences would indicate such. We are responsible for raising these kids. So maybe it’s our fault?

Our current government, acting under clearly ideological motivations, have hardly helped matters. I think that there are obvious consequences to profound and swinging cuts to community funding. That if you make Higher Education a choice only for the wealthy elite. You go to US private providers and proclaim openly that public healthcare in the UK is up for sale. You allow the financial sector to go unregulated and unpunished for a catastrophe mostly keenly felt by those outside it. You close libraries and community centres, public pools and gyms. You take away the EMA struggling families. You clearly evidence that only the wealthy are protected and served by the state. You do all of these things in a society that is the most stratified in the developed world and this is what happens. They are responsible for pushing a malicious and vindictive agenda of social engineering too far and too fast. For setting light to a very dry and very ready tinderbox. So maybe it’s the Tories?

But your environment does not excuse your actions. You are responsible for what you do. The closure of your local pool does not justify your arson nor your manslaughter. I understand that if you and your forefathers are utterly disenfranchised then you may feel compelled to take payment from society where you can. But that does not make it right. So it’s their fault and theirs alone? Because goodness is an objective truth that exists apart from your upbringing – to act in a malicious manner is not excusable.

… But I don’t know… I’m really struggling… A friend of mine has commented that she was afraid of consequence as a child. Of parents and the great bearded sky wizard who threatened damnation, and indeed interviews with looters have revealed that it it’s the certainty that will be no retribution that has spurred them on… but I don’t know… It wasn’t *only* the fear of consequence that limited my actions as a child. And it’s not only the fear of consequence that stays my hand today. I did and do possess some kind of basic morality.

Those who have carried out obscene crimes in the last few days are accountable and should be held accountable. As individuals… But… it’s up to all of us, state and society, to try and create an environment that nurtures a different kind of child.

Male teachers in primary schools for kids raised without fathers. Activity centres offering alternatives to spending one’s time lustfully looking at a culture of excess that you are ostracized from. Paradigms for parenting that allow both profound love and stern discipline without seeming contradictory. Mixed housing schemes to banish the ghetto. Deeper and more complex (and more expensive) community policing methods than the criminalizing stop-and-search… So many ideas. But the real difficulty is that these pursue long-term goals. We don’t conceptualize the long-term very well. We expect results immediately – certainly within the span of one government. Cameron will flood the cities with police today but will he re-open schemes to put a local Bobby into every school and estate? Pump funding into teenage mentoring schemes? Complex plans that won’t benefit his government or even the next. Plans are about human relationships building over decades rather than immediate headlines and target figures.

This should not happen again – that responsibility is shared by us all. It is perhaps distasteful to admit that many of those who looted in the last few days are lost to us. There are no means of saving them. That does not mean that their progeny are also write-off’s; continued neglect evidently doesn’t work. We need to take better care of our society’s children.

What do you think?

15
Dec
08

Why web people are better people

There is an overarching principle to many of my approaches and preferred styles.

I believe that this is typical of my generation and background and is well defined by Don Tapscott (http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2008/nov/08/facebook-youth-culture-social-networking) in his article “Generation expects” for The Guardian newspaper.

He describes new working practices and models based upon the collaborative environment of the web; an environment that I have become at home with and, more importantly, one that it is my role to promote. I am unsure however if it is the technology that has shaped me or if my tendency toward this way of thinking has led me toward the web.

In my workplace I expect:

  • frequent communications from leaders
  • easy access to applicable and relevant policies
  • a shallow hierarchy
  • an environment where a manager is a role not an authority
  • a tendency to promote change rather than maintain the status quo

I also expect the tools available to me to reflect this environment.

25
Nov
08

Punching kids with knives

I was reading of Manuel’s terrible terrible fate here: http://welldonefillet.blogspot.com/2008/11/stop-fingering-my-forks.html on his sterling blog. His experience with the younglings (ala Star Wars) reminded me of my second teaching post. A post in which I started looking for a new job three hours after arriving.

There were many many reasons why this school was abhorrent. The area was one; I must post about Thamesmead at some point and its subterranean methane factories. The children were another; subhuman wretches. The staff another still; nauseating city-boys who couldn’t cut it in the finance sector and fled here to abuse Inspiration instead. But what finally drove me out of the place was my schoolyard experience.

I strode across the yard, swerving to avoid any contact with the young morlocks, expertly rolling a smoke in my coat pocket (one-handed I might add), when I saw one girl from my class race toward another.

I arrived too late to stop the first punch being landed and the first girl being thrown to the ground in retaliation. The girl on the ground quickly reached into her shirt and produced a short knife and tried to get to her feet; swiping at her opponent as she did so… I really didn’t know what else to do… so I tackled this 14 year old and pinned her shoulders with my legs.

I desperately hoped that would be the end of it but was immediately robbed of that illusion as I saw several quick booted kicks landed on her head. The other girl taking advantage of my pinning her adversary..

For a few short minutes, until more staff arrived to my rescue, I found myself in the thin moral ice of sitting on one 14 year old; applying all the pressure I could to her knife-brandishing arm, while punching another girl repeatedly in the chest with my one free arm to try and halt her assault.

All around us dozens of their peers gathered; shouting obscenities, screaming incoherently and, in some cases, tearing open their shirts and bras (I shit you not). “Ah”, I thought, “The future is in good hands”.

… What was truly dismaying about the whole incident was the lack of reaction. No suspension. No talk of the knife. The girls were back in my class the next day pulling their wily highjinks (some of these I, again, should relate at another time).

So, for youths’ future, I present the City Academy programme!




Suscribe to my drivelly ramblings

I want to kill everyone. Satan is good. Satan is my friend.

Tweetering

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