Tagged Posts
Is recycling a good thing?

Now, the BBC and others are reporting that accountants BDO Story Hayward have done some research for the TUC and reckon that one in every 56 UK businesses will fail this year, a 59% rise on 2008. Further, the British Chambers of Commerce last week suggested that UK unemployment could reach 3.2 million — or just over 10% of the workforce — by the second half of next year.
I can't help wondering whether the Tories would do well to just recycle the old poster and not spend money on new advertising …
16-Mar-2009 20:03 · Trackback ·
tags: politics · Labour · voting
tags: politics · Labour · voting
Dyslexia a 'fiction'?
He suggests that, currently, 35,500 students are receiving disability allowances for dyslexia at an annual cost of £78.4m. "Certified dyslexics get longer in exams," he said. "There has been created a situation where there are financial and educational incentives to being bad at spelling and reading.
The story has been picked up by Janet Daley in The Telegraph who, quite rightly in my opinion, takes to task the figure given by the Chief Executive of Dyslexia Action, Shirley Cramer, that there are 6 million 'sufferers' from dyslexia — which amounts to 10% of the population! This hardly seems likely and, as Daley also points out, for those of us at primary school during the 50s and 60s it beggars belief that this high a proportion could ever be true.
It is bad, in the same way that going in to my bank to pay in three cheques and the assistant getting out her calculator to add them up — the cheques being for £40, £10 and £20 — is another comment on the atrocious state of teaching in this country.
In my view, children need to be taught how to do things and that means from first principles. Not the 'quick' way by using a calculator or spell-check to sort out their mistakes, but made to exercise their memory.
I am taking part in a televised discussion for Teacher's TV later this month — in part representing Wikipedia — and I've no doubt will make similar comments there. Know where to find the answer, sure. But know how to do it yourself too!
14-Jan-2009 15:20 · 1 Comment · Trackback ·
tags: Labour · education
tags: Labour · education
Screw the evidence
From www.openrightsgroup.org …
UK "Culture" Secretary Andrew Burnham today indicated that he would support an extension of the length of copyright protection granted to sound recordings from 50 years to 70 years. This directly contradicts past Government policy and the 2006 report from the independent Gowers Review of Intellectual Property which recommended against term extension.Database nation
From www.guardian.co.uk …
Cory Doctorow: "The identity card I'm to be issued when I renew my visa is intended to be linked to all my daily activities: my medical care, my use of transit, my banking and finance, my tax – a single identifier that will track me through time and space, forever. The dossier thus gathered on me will be managed by the same agencies that have lost (literally) tens of millions' worth of records on British people in the past year alone. It will all be tied to my biometric identifiers, such as fingerprints. Unless you wear gloves at all times, you leave these identifiers behind continuously, everywhere you go. These identifiers are not only available to law enforcement and the state, but to anyone who cares to lift them off any smooth surface you happen to touch. Once these identifiers are compromised, there is no means – short of amputation – to change them." Yet another reason why I support no2id against Labour's headlong rush towards a complete police state.09-Oct-2008 19:28 · Trackback ·
tags: no2id · state v society · Labour · tech
tags: no2id · state v society · Labour · tech
Where to put enemies
From news.bbc.co.uk …
"Four of the MPs who signed the backbenchers' letter which prompted Mr Brown's predecessor Tony Blair to announce a timetable for his resignation in 2006 each gained ministerial office. Tom Watson becomes parliamentary secretary to the Cabinet Office, Chris Bryant officer of the leader of the Commons, Kevan Jones parliamentary under-secretary in the Ministry of Defence and Sion Simon gets a junior post in the Universities Department." As the old adage goes, "Keep your friends close but your enemies closer still" perhaps?05-Oct-2008 22:02 · Trackback ·
tags: politics · Westminster · Labour
tags: politics · Westminster · Labour
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