"Lets decide our immigration on the basis of the needs of our communities and our economy, not to the tune of the dog-whistle cynicism of Lynton Crosby or the hate campaigns of some sections of our press, whose idea of patriotism is to base themselves in an overseas tax haven."
"It's not good enough to be grateful to our public service workers only at a moment of crisis and disaster. They deserve dignity: the dignity or fully funded services, the dignity of not seeing their jobs cut and living standards fall." -
Corbyn is on that righteous indignation ticket right now, and it's wonderful.
What?
Am I just confused as to what a grammar school is?
Gamed? The kid still has to pass a test to get in right? Are they sitting the test for them?
This is really winding the Tories up.
"Gamed" in the sense that middle class parents often pay for private tuition with the sole intention of giving their child a leg up in order to win a place at grammar schools. Children from poorer backgrounds do not have this luxury and are already at a compounded disadvantage.
It should be noted that I don't necessarily hold this against parents themselves for doing whatever they can to improve their children's life chances, but this is not something the government should be abetting.
And that's without even considering how wealthier families can move property in to areas with well regarded grammar schools, which is another form of "gaming" the system.
A young child growing up in a middle class household where parents can afford educational resources and are able to help their children to learn is much more likely to pass the 11+. I don't feel that deciding childrens future for life at 11 is right
Of course, I went to a Comprehensive and I also feel that children who were never going to be academic didn't have enough exposure to other subjects which could help them to get into a trade, etc in working life. So it's not an ideal system either.
Or just good schools...Well the obvious solution to that problem is to have well regarded grammar schools in all areas.
If I'm right in thinking that this Queen's Speech is to last two years worth of operational parliament...
1: The Conservatives expect to pass very little.
2: The Conservatives have only chosen to do things that place Labour in a position to support or otherwise be criticised.
3: Austerity still reigns and nothing will change for the better in any way.
I hope something happens next week that destabilises the whole Tory/DUP coalition. Working with such a staunch extremist party will backfire on them somehow.
What?
Am I just confused as to what a grammar school is?
Several features stand out from the initial exploratory work on the PLASC data- girlsare more likely to attend grammar schools than boys, as are children born in the first
four months of the school year (September to December). More striking, however, is
the large under representation of those eligible for free school meals (FSM). This is
still markedly so even when we condition on pupil attainment at age 11. Bright, poor
children rarely secure a grammar school place.
The results of our analysis indicate that selective LEAs overall do not achieve
substantially improved performance compared with similar non-selective LEAs.
Grammar school pupils do demonstrate significantly higher levels of attainment, but
those children not attending grammar schools in selective areas do slightly less well
than their peers in non-selective areas. In part this appears to stem from the crowding
of poor pupils into the non-grammar schools who do not want to apply for a place in the grammar school do not have to sit the test.
The minority of able poor children who do attend grammar schools do exceptionally
well. Hence there are two countervailing factors around grammar schools and social
mobility: Bright children eligible for FSM do exceptionally well in grammar schools
but very few achieve a place, even given attainment levels at age 11. It is likely that
this reflects greater efforts by affluent parents to coach their children to pass the
selection exam (often referred to as the 11+). It may also be that schools are selecting
pupils using criteria other than ability, as there is a grey area where high attainment in
the 11+ exam doesnt automatically secure admission if there is competition for
places even after setting the pass-mark.
I'm wondering if he's still in campaigning mode, or if he really has evolved through the GE into a much more credible leader.Corbyn has been surprisingly stellar with this speech. He's normally a bit meh in the Commons compared to the stumps, but he's dropping zinger after zinger and they're all pretty much on target.
Well the obvious solution to that problem is to have well regarded grammar schools in all areas.
It was not the government yes. The Corporation of the City of London has nothing to do with Khan though.Oddly enough, some comments on BBC News' Twitter page on the Grenfell survivors luxury flat story are claiming that it was the Government taking action while Corbyn "did nothing", yet failing to realise it was done by the Corporation of London, which if unless I'm mistaken is basically the Sadiq Khan's office and the GLA; who did indeed seem to pick up on Corbyn's suggestion.
Corbyn was always pretty good. It's the media sentiment that has changed.I'm wondering if he's still in campaigning mode, or if he really has evolved through the GE into a much more credible leader.
There's stuff I learnt at my private junior school about how to do exams and techniques that gave me an advantage against co-workers *20* years later. You just can't and won't learn that stuff if you're coming from a deprived background. It meant I got scholarship offers from several private high schools - even though self-evidently scholarships should be for those who can't afford it, not those who can but got extra tuition to improve their exam results.
Tutoring for the 11+ was exactly the same. It allows the rich and middle class to get ahead by using money. Now, you might not object to that, but the evidence shows it doesn't actually help your kid either. It doesn't help anyone. It's one of those common sense ideas that actually doesn't work in real life.
You'd be far better off just using the cash to shrink class sizes across the board (and remove some of the fucking exams).
In short, they're pretty good for the small amount of poor kids who claw their way in, but disadvantageous for the rest of the cohort who don't.
it was done by the Corporation of London, which if unless I'm mistaken is basically the Sadiq Khan's office and the GLA; who did indeed seem to pick up on Corbyn's suggestion.
Brexit OT: http://neogaf.com/showthread.php?t=1240288
There's also a UK PoliGAF community thread: http://neogaf.com/showthread.php?t=1052585
Currently dormant since everything fits in either GE or Brexit, but maybe we will return to it when this thread is done?
Reports that Corbyn has really smartened up his act. Election has really forced him to get himself together.
That thing kmag posted says "Grammar school pupils do demonstrate significantly higher levels of attainment" though?
Well, it says that they only do "slightly less well".
That whole thing seems to be saying the problem is not getting enough bright poor kids into grammar schools. Maybe we should work on sorting that problem out rather than scrapping the whole idea? The ones that do get in do really well!
The loss of Salmond is one of the big tragedies this election.Lol that exchange between May and the SNP.
Ahhh. I'm not super familiar with how the Corporation of London works.It was not the government yes. The Corporation of the City of London has nothing to do with Khan though.
Ehhhh... he's had his moments, but I feel like he's gone to a whole new level during the GE and managed to stay there weeks after.Corbyn was always pretty good. It's the media sentiment that has changed.
Completely different bodies. The City of London is not under Khan's jurisdiction.Ahhh. I'm not super familiar with how the Corporation of London works.
Reports that Corbyn has really smartened up his act. Election has really forced him to get himself together.
The loss of Robertson is one of the big tragedies this election.
I could understand Poland having that level of growth. Stings a bit when Germany and France have pulled off decent growth too though.https://twitter.com/withorpe/status/877178742946267136
The tory economic miracle. Wage growth since 2010:
Poland +23%
Germany +14%
France +11%
UK -10.4%
Illuminati confirmed. This stuff must give David Icke a stiffy.You're mistaken. The Corporation is the body that governs the historic City Of London; The Square Mile that was once the old Roman city and is now home to international finance. Their pockets are very very deep and they own huge parcels of land across the city. It's undemocratic, weird and so ancient there are no surviving records of its founding.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_London_Corporation
Which was swiftly shut down by the speaker.DUP feeling the power around them.
That too. But I actually like Salmond!Corrected![]()