Don't watch this if you are offended by the F word and other obscenities. Do watch if you feel current education policy justifies such language use. The video pre-dates the Coalition and so applies to the target culture of the three main parties.
Monday, 21 January 2013
Butt's blog bites back
Brent Council leader, Muhammed Butt's, New Year blog has on the Council website LINK has received four comments. He wrote about the Council's strategy on improving and creating employment opportunities:
Posted 16/01/2013 10:05:11 by Shel
Posted 16/01/2013 10:05:11 by Shel
It's
great to see that the creation of new jobs and getting people into work
is a top priority. I hope Brent will be able to fund projects aimed at
getting locals into work through training sessions on interview
techniques, job hunting, finding relevant training programmes etc... I
can-not express the great importance of such programmes. 4 years ago, I
attended a 2 day workshop run by Brent Council aimed at getting the
long-term unemployed into work. At that point I had been busy raising 3
children. The workshops gave me the confidence to get back into
employment and my career has been moving from strength to strength. I
feel indebted to the programme.
Posted 16/01/2013 08:56:47 by Jean Roberts
It
is good to see that you are concentrating on jobs and growth. Education
is also under attack by this government with its drive to make all
schools academies or free schools through bribery with our money or by
force to big chains who will ultimately run the education system for
profit. Brent should be doing more to stand up for our great community
schools. We now face a possible free school paid for by the DfE (our
taxes) without any consultation with the community, appearing somewhere
in Wembley Park. The ruling by the Information Commissioner that this
process should be open and transparent will hopefully mean we will find
out exactly what is happening.
Posted 15/01/2013 22:34:19 by Tracey Burke
Increasing
employment opportunities is a laudable aim but I have concerns that
this is being promoted as some kind of panacea for the supposed ills in
society. What type of employment opportunities will these be? Will there
be affordable housing and ethical private landlords to house these
employees?
There is a wealth of research that points to perceived ills as being in
depth and entwined issues, the underlying commonalities being
inequality, low pay scales, lack of affordable housing and statutory
services raising the gateways for access to services. We are mindlessly
accepting central government cuts that will decimate our most vulnerable
members of society.
What you don't clarify Mr Butt is how your cabinet will support people
who work for disgustingly low pay with little or no employment rights.
Nor do you address your strategy for supporting Brent residents who will
never be able to work? As you are only too well aware the universal
credits system that will hit us shortly is a template for increasing
inequality. How are you and your cabinet planing to ensure that this
government doesn't impact on the residents who vote for you and for whom
you have statutory duties of care?
Posted 15/01/2013 17:41:41 by Michael Calderbank
I'm
very glad to hear that jobs are such a priority. In that case, I take
it, the council won't be making compulsory redundancies as a result of
implementing cuts to the budget?
Also, I wonder how many people who work for external contractors
procured by Brent Council to provide services are paid less than the
London Living Wage, and why paying a living wage isn't a precondition of
the tendering process? Perhaps you can let us know on your next blog?
Labels:
blog,
Brent Council,
education,
employment,
Muhammed Butt
Sunday, 20 January 2013
Free Harlesden family history course begins on February 6th
Plaque in Hazeldene Road - find out about YOUR family history |
Harlesden Routes is a free family history programme LINK which will run
between January to March 2013 to support local people in taking the
first steps in learning and researching their family history. We are
looking for committed individuals who live, work and/
or have strong family connections with Harlesden. Participants must be
willing to develop a case study based on interviews and or research of
an aspect of their family history which can be shared with others
locally.
Harlesden is a culturally diverse area with many untold stories and
experiences of local history and migration which makes the area a
positive and inclusive place to live and work. Every Generation mission
is to promote the oral and family heritage of the lives
and history of local communities.
The Harlesden Routes Course will start on February 6th with all
activities taking place on a Wednesday evening at the Unity Centre LINK. In
addition there also be a trip to Brent Museum and Archives and the ‘Who
Do You Think You Are’ family history exhibition at
Olympia.
The session will cover different aspects of family history using local
records and online archives, using photographs, social history, creative
writing, interviewing techniques and the importance of DNA.
Harlesden Routes is a partnership which involves Every Generation,
Catalyst Gateway, and Brent Museum and Archives. The projected is funded
by Harlesden Community First and LIFT.
Place are limited so please email patrick@everygeneration.co.uk for an application form or further
details.
Labels:
Brent Museum and Archives,
Catalyst Gateway,
Every Generation,
family,
Halesden Community First,
Harlesden History,
Harlesden routes,
LIFT,
migration,
Unity Centre
Saturday, 19 January 2013
Taking the Michael reaches new heights
By some means not yet revealed, Michael Rosen's satirical letter to Michael Gove has appeared on a semi-official website which specialises in government contracts LINK
In case it disappears I reproduce Michael's advice below:
I thought I would try to be positive and lay out a set of modest proposals for you to consider in 2013.
1 Universities
It’s imperative to keep down the number of students. “Graduate” is really another name for people who think they’re entitled to be paid well. We are in an era when we must all pull together to ensure that workers work more and earn less (or as employers call it, “keeping labour costs down”) and large numbers of graduates swimming around the economy are an impediment to this. What’s more, three years of independent living and discussion have the potential to turn many of these young people into dissenters and trouble-makers. There is an argument for saying that it is the job of government to enable a population to increase its cultural capital, raising the level of education of as many people as possible. You must portray this sentiment as a utopian fantasy of a long-lost past.
So, let’s put into practice a set of clear policies:
a) You and your colleagues (and Eric Pickles) need to put a lot of effort into mocking and rubbishing university courses. Don’t worry about consistency here: pick on both vocational courses and seemingly obscure academic ones: “A degree in leisure management, ha ha ha”; ‘A degree in medieval German literature, ha ha ha”.
b) Suggest at every opportunity that academics and students are spongers and skivers. Contrast their use of public money, long holidays and low hours of work with MPs’ honesty, diligence and industriousness.
c) Make a big deal out of things like the “knowledge economy”, “what Britain does best”, “centres of excellence” and “world-class universities”. Rely on journalists to put this inflated waffle (which you don’t believe in anyway) on their front pages while relegating the cuts to a one-inch column on page 11.
d) It is absolutely vital to boast about making it possible for the “disadvantaged” to go to university while making it harder for them to do so. Fees of £9,000 a year are already much too low and some students from poorer families are slipping through the net and going to university. We must discourage them from doing so. I suggest fees in the region of £20,000 a year. One scholarship a year per university would serve the purpose of looking as if you’re being “fair”.
I am so glad that your colleague David Willetts has highlighted the problems of white working-class boys going to university. Given your party’s electoral precariousness at the moment, it is vital that you and your colleagues present a narrative which suggests that Britain today is a place where white people can’t get on and black people are given incredible advantages.
2 Ebacc
There is a real danger that you’re about to be stabbed in the back by your predecessor Kenneth Baker. He has come up with a plan to abolish exams at 16, create higher schools and training places for 14- to 18-year-olds. With utmost urgency, you must dig up anything you can on Baker to suggest that he is either an out-of-touch old backwoodsman fart and/or he is in thrall to Trotskyists.
For you to be able to push through what is fast becoming an exam that will be a major impediment for most young people to develop as learners, you must:
a) ignore all evidence on adolescents and learning;
b) make misleading comparisons with the old O-levels;
c) keep talking about “rigour” without explaining what you mean by that word;
d) rubbish teachers by saying that, unlike MPs, they are lazy and misuse public money.
3 Primary school exams
The phonics screening check and the spelling, punctuation and grammar – Spag – test.
You must resist all demands to provide evidence that these tests will improve reading and writing, as there is none. Avoid public debate about this. Potential problems coming up are:
a) that many more children failed the phonics test than learn how to read using the old mixed methods;
b) many good readers failed the phonics test;
c) some children are being told they have “failed” and so can’t proceed to “real” books.
Rely on ill-informed newspaper editors to keep these stories off the front pages. When it comes to the grammar test, I predict that there will be real problems, with teachers not knowing how to teach for it and hardly any children understanding what is being tested. Therefore you must keep up the campaign of rubbishing teachers, showing how, unlike MPs, they are lazy and misuse public money.
In a key speech, make the suggestion that most British children are ignorant, illiterate, stupid and badly behaved.
4 Academies programme
Stop trying to be nice. Step in now, and make every state school in England an academy. Hail this termination of public accountability as a triumph of “freedom from control”. Make sure that your own burgeoning powers of control over the nation’s teachers and young people is never mentioned. It is crucial that whenever an academy fails an inspection, you must rubbish the teachers, showing how, unlike MPs, they are lazy and misuse public money.
It is highly unlikely that you will be able to keep tabs on all the academies, so I suggest that you create a set of regional committees to manage them. These must not be called “local” in case people compare them to local authorities and the management committees must not be elected, but made up of people appointed by you.
5 Teachers
Abolish all teacher training. In a key speech, try to whip up people’s bad memories of individual teachers (who were usually just people trying to implement what governments made them do) by saying how “we all hate teachers”. Play to people’s feelings that it is always other people’s children who are “bad influences” on their own, and what is needed is a “firm hand”. This should enable you to usher in the replacement of teachers by ex-military personnel who can do the job of patrolling past the computer terminals (equipped with News Corporation syllabuses), which all children will be looking at all day in the exciting schools of the future.
6 History
You must work even harder on the history curriculum, ensuring that all our children in England are proud of our country’s history. I’m not absolutely sure what this means if Scotland becomes independent, but I’m sure you’ve figured out what “our country” means better than me. Meanwhile, can we make sure that dead white men are celebrated the most? All attempts to show either that some dead white men did bad things, or that there are some important things done by dead white women, dead black men and even dead black women, must be eradicated. We need to have our classrooms filled with pride. After all, thanks to your government, more and more children are arriving at school with empty bellies, so at least let’s fill them with pride, eh?
7 Business
All schools must be turned into limited companies. Headteachers should be employers (“school company directors”) while compulsorily non-unionised teachers and pupils are the workers. Schools should be required to make goods and sell services for money and become places that offer car-cleaning, photocopying, fruit-picking, biscuit-making and the like at highly competitive rates.
8 Your job
The moment it looks as if staying in your job is an impediment to your long-term objectives of becoming leader of the Conservative party, make it clear to David Cameron that you’ve never been very interested in education and you have outlived your usefulness.
I hope that these proposals will be of use to you throughout the year.
In case it disappears I reproduce Michael's advice below:
For the start of the year, I’m sending you some
helpful ideas, from how to keep student numbers down to keeping teachers
in check.
1 Universities
It’s imperative to keep down the number of students. “Graduate” is really another name for people who think they’re entitled to be paid well. We are in an era when we must all pull together to ensure that workers work more and earn less (or as employers call it, “keeping labour costs down”) and large numbers of graduates swimming around the economy are an impediment to this. What’s more, three years of independent living and discussion have the potential to turn many of these young people into dissenters and trouble-makers. There is an argument for saying that it is the job of government to enable a population to increase its cultural capital, raising the level of education of as many people as possible. You must portray this sentiment as a utopian fantasy of a long-lost past.
So, let’s put into practice a set of clear policies:
a) You and your colleagues (and Eric Pickles) need to put a lot of effort into mocking and rubbishing university courses. Don’t worry about consistency here: pick on both vocational courses and seemingly obscure academic ones: “A degree in leisure management, ha ha ha”; ‘A degree in medieval German literature, ha ha ha”.
b) Suggest at every opportunity that academics and students are spongers and skivers. Contrast their use of public money, long holidays and low hours of work with MPs’ honesty, diligence and industriousness.
c) Make a big deal out of things like the “knowledge economy”, “what Britain does best”, “centres of excellence” and “world-class universities”. Rely on journalists to put this inflated waffle (which you don’t believe in anyway) on their front pages while relegating the cuts to a one-inch column on page 11.
d) It is absolutely vital to boast about making it possible for the “disadvantaged” to go to university while making it harder for them to do so. Fees of £9,000 a year are already much too low and some students from poorer families are slipping through the net and going to university. We must discourage them from doing so. I suggest fees in the region of £20,000 a year. One scholarship a year per university would serve the purpose of looking as if you’re being “fair”.
I am so glad that your colleague David Willetts has highlighted the problems of white working-class boys going to university. Given your party’s electoral precariousness at the moment, it is vital that you and your colleagues present a narrative which suggests that Britain today is a place where white people can’t get on and black people are given incredible advantages.
2 Ebacc
There is a real danger that you’re about to be stabbed in the back by your predecessor Kenneth Baker. He has come up with a plan to abolish exams at 16, create higher schools and training places for 14- to 18-year-olds. With utmost urgency, you must dig up anything you can on Baker to suggest that he is either an out-of-touch old backwoodsman fart and/or he is in thrall to Trotskyists.
For you to be able to push through what is fast becoming an exam that will be a major impediment for most young people to develop as learners, you must:
a) ignore all evidence on adolescents and learning;
b) make misleading comparisons with the old O-levels;
c) keep talking about “rigour” without explaining what you mean by that word;
d) rubbish teachers by saying that, unlike MPs, they are lazy and misuse public money.
3 Primary school exams
The phonics screening check and the spelling, punctuation and grammar – Spag – test.
You must resist all demands to provide evidence that these tests will improve reading and writing, as there is none. Avoid public debate about this. Potential problems coming up are:
a) that many more children failed the phonics test than learn how to read using the old mixed methods;
b) many good readers failed the phonics test;
c) some children are being told they have “failed” and so can’t proceed to “real” books.
Rely on ill-informed newspaper editors to keep these stories off the front pages. When it comes to the grammar test, I predict that there will be real problems, with teachers not knowing how to teach for it and hardly any children understanding what is being tested. Therefore you must keep up the campaign of rubbishing teachers, showing how, unlike MPs, they are lazy and misuse public money.
In a key speech, make the suggestion that most British children are ignorant, illiterate, stupid and badly behaved.
4 Academies programme
Stop trying to be nice. Step in now, and make every state school in England an academy. Hail this termination of public accountability as a triumph of “freedom from control”. Make sure that your own burgeoning powers of control over the nation’s teachers and young people is never mentioned. It is crucial that whenever an academy fails an inspection, you must rubbish the teachers, showing how, unlike MPs, they are lazy and misuse public money.
It is highly unlikely that you will be able to keep tabs on all the academies, so I suggest that you create a set of regional committees to manage them. These must not be called “local” in case people compare them to local authorities and the management committees must not be elected, but made up of people appointed by you.
5 Teachers
Abolish all teacher training. In a key speech, try to whip up people’s bad memories of individual teachers (who were usually just people trying to implement what governments made them do) by saying how “we all hate teachers”. Play to people’s feelings that it is always other people’s children who are “bad influences” on their own, and what is needed is a “firm hand”. This should enable you to usher in the replacement of teachers by ex-military personnel who can do the job of patrolling past the computer terminals (equipped with News Corporation syllabuses), which all children will be looking at all day in the exciting schools of the future.
6 History
You must work even harder on the history curriculum, ensuring that all our children in England are proud of our country’s history. I’m not absolutely sure what this means if Scotland becomes independent, but I’m sure you’ve figured out what “our country” means better than me. Meanwhile, can we make sure that dead white men are celebrated the most? All attempts to show either that some dead white men did bad things, or that there are some important things done by dead white women, dead black men and even dead black women, must be eradicated. We need to have our classrooms filled with pride. After all, thanks to your government, more and more children are arriving at school with empty bellies, so at least let’s fill them with pride, eh?
7 Business
All schools must be turned into limited companies. Headteachers should be employers (“school company directors”) while compulsorily non-unionised teachers and pupils are the workers. Schools should be required to make goods and sell services for money and become places that offer car-cleaning, photocopying, fruit-picking, biscuit-making and the like at highly competitive rates.
8 Your job
The moment it looks as if staying in your job is an impediment to your long-term objectives of becoming leader of the Conservative party, make it clear to David Cameron that you’ve never been very interested in education and you have outlived your usefulness.
I hope that these proposals will be of use to you throughout the year.
Labels:
academies,
British Government,
Ebacc,
free schools,
history,
Michael Gove,
Michael Rosen,
teachers,
UK Government,
universities
Friday, 18 January 2013
Preston Manor strike may be called off after conditions of service concessions by management
NUT members at Preston Manor All-through School will be deciding next week whether to accept the advice of their leaders and call off the strike planned for Wednesday January 23rd after concessions by the school management on conditions of service but with academy conversion going ahead.
Brent Teachers Association Secretary Jean Roberts wrote to NUT members:
Jean Roberts told members:
Brent Teachers Association Secretary Jean Roberts wrote to NUT members:
Because of your determination and collective strength, your tremendous unity and solidarity throughout this whole process, you have won on EVERY point you asked for to protect your terms and conditions after conversion.This will mean that a Co-operative Academy will still go ahead but the strike ballot is still live and the union reserves the right to strike if the concessions are not written into agreements by February 1st.
Together you have won probably the best conditions in any converter academy, not just in Brent, but in the whole of England.
Jean Roberts told members:
You all have been magnificent in your determination to oppose this conversion, first voting overwhelmingly in the staff ballot and then as NUT members voting for action when your views were just ignored – not even a governors meeting was called to discuss the result. I would hope that Matthew Lantos and the Governors realise they need to regain your trust over what had happened and to apply those Co-operative values which they signed up to.
Council challenged to exclude Veolia from Brent public realm contract
Following a two year
local campaign by activists in North London, French multi-national waste
company Veolia withdrew from a North London Waste Authority £4.7 billion waste
contract just before Christmas.
Campaigners opposed Veolia on the grounds that it abuses human rights
through its complicity in Israel's violations of international law in the
occupied territories of Palestine.
Richard Falk, UN Special
Rapporteur on the West Bank and Gaza Strip, in a letter to NLWA councillors
wrote:
It is my view that Veolia’s violations of the UN Global Compact principles and its deep and protracted complicity with grave breaches of international law make it an inappropriate partner for any public institution, especially as a provider of public services.
....I urge you to follow the example set by public
authorities and European banks that have chosen to disassociate themselves from
Veolia and take the just and principled decision not to award Veolia any public
service contracts. Such a measure would contribute to upholding the rule of law
and advancing peace based on justice.
Veolia currently operates waste collection, recycling and
street cleansing services in Brent in a contract that expires in 2014. The
procurement process for a new contract, that also includes parks maintenance,
has begun.
Brent Palestine Solidarity
Campaign has pledged to campaign against its inclusion in the upcoming Brent
Council public realm procurement process. Liz Lindsay, Secretary of Brent and
Harrow Palestine Solidarity Campaign said:
Brent Council must not ignore
Veolia’s grave misconduct. They should not include Veolia in their procurement
short list. Otherwise they will risk Veolia pulling out at the last minute as
they did with the NLWA procurement, This would leave the Council obliged to give the
contract to the only remaining bidder
left in the process. I am
sure Brent Council will recognise Veolia’s
role in Palestine and exclude Veolia from the start.
Declaration of interest. I am chair of Brent and Harrow Palestine Solidarity Campaign
Labels:
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Brent Council,
public realm contract,
Richard Falk,
UN,
Veolia. Brent and Harrow Palestine Solidary Campaign,
violations. human rights,
waste. streetcare,
West Bank. Gaza
Thursday, 17 January 2013
Preston Manor teachers strike as Co-operative values betrayed
Values betrayed? |
The NUT wrote the following letter to parents this week.
Dear Parents/Carers
You will be aware of the consultation over academy status. The joint education unions sent you a communication during that consultation (see overleaf) about why they believe this is NOT the right move for Preston Manor. In a secret ballot the staff rejected the move by 86.5% - a massive vote against an academy. This was also on a large turnout of staff. Parents have also voted by a good majority against the school converting.
Due to this overwhelming opposition the NUT, by far the biggest teachers union in the school,
balloted our members on possible strike action. This is particularly after the governors decided to ignore the staff and parent ballot and continue down the academy path. NUT members have voted YES by 94.6% on a high turnout to take strike action if the Governors do not listen to staff and parents.
None of our members want to go on strike and we are hoping to negotiate with Governors to at least postpone the process. Currently the school is a co-operative trust school supposedly run on a democratic basis. There has been no opportunity to develop this with almost immediate academy conversion.
The Governors are not following the Co-op values they and you agreed to.We therefore are asking the governorsto heed the democratic vote and not convert. The school, Co-op and unions have had the opportunity to put their arguments to both staff and parents/carers. No-one can claim that the facts were not clear to those voting. People clearly voted against an academy.
We ask that you support the NUT members in their action. The first day for action is proposed for Wednesday 23rd January. We really hope that this can be averted by the Head and Governors deciding to step back from conversion on 1st February.
Please contact the parent governors (details on school website) and tell them that you support the teachers and that governors should follow the democratic wish of staff and parents
Labels:
academy conversion,
Co-operative Academy,
Co-operative Trust,
NUT,
Preston Manor School,
strike
Roke Primary parents denouce government 'master plan'
The Save Roke Primary School campaign in South London, which like Gladstone Park Primary faces being forced into becoming an academy has issued the following statement after today's news that Ofsted is to focus on schools in under-performing local authorities:
Ofsted’s move to make blanket inspections across under-performing areas is front page news today. This will catch out not
only failing schools but those like our school – a popular,
well-achieving primary – caught out by a temporary blip in performance.
Roke primary has been forced to academy status, and alarmingly, handed
to David Cameron’s personal friend, mentor and major Tory donor, Lord
Harris of Harris Academies raising concerns about vested interests.
Roke
parents are campaigning against rushed Academy takeover with an
overwhelming majority against being coerced into forced academy. Roke
Primary school has no consistent history of low standards, just one
unsatisfactory Ofsted report. Despite strength of parent feeling, there
is no DofE appeal procedure allowing the parents’ case to be heard. The
speed at which the school has gone from being outstanding to being cast
as a ‘failing’ school- in just 7 months – resulting in Roke being
snatched from local authority control has taken parents by profound
surprise. Many are left with questions about whether takeover has been
unfairly fast tracked by the Government.
Roke
parent Debbie Shaw comments, ‘We believe that this is a concerted
government master plan to catch out not only low performing schools, but
wavering schools just like ours who have a temporary blip in their
results. This is clearly part of a larger government agenda.”
Roke
father, Nigel Geary-Andrews said, “It is alarming that the government
is rushing through forced academies on schools like Roke, where there is
no proven record of failure over any length of time, without any
consultation with parents at all and no way of appealing. This does not
seem democratic or transparent to me”.
We
would like reassurance from Mr Gove that his new targeted approach will
allow schools such as ours time to show that we have turned around
performance in a short space of time. As well as a voice for the parents
through proper consultation - and the right to appeal.
An investigation in The Guardian 15/01/13 revealed that, ‘The government may be flouting its own education guidelines’. DofEofficial directions say poorly
performing primaries should only be obliged to become sponsored
academies ‘when a school has been underperforming for some time and if
the problems are not being tackled’.
A
shotgun Ofsted inspection was announced at Roke Primary on Tuesday,
less than 24 hours after it was revealed in The Guardian that, ‘The
government may be flouting its own education guidelines’. Parents are
eagerly awaiting the results of the monitoring visit which they believe
will show evidence of excellent improvement at the school.
There
is disquiet among parents about the Government’s choice of sponsor.
Roke is being handed over to the Harris Federation, run by millionaire
Tory Lord and Carpetright businessman, Phillip Harris- who David Cameron
has named as a personal friend who helped to prepare him for power.
Lord Harris has donated in excess of £2 million pounds to the Tory
party, as well as personal donations to David Cameron, George Osborne
and Boris Johnson. He plays a key role in advising the government on
failing schools and academy policy.
Parent, Janine Norris expressed
concern at the close relationship between the Harris Federation and
Government decision-makers, ‘It concerns me and many other Roke parents
that the Government has not got the good grace to seek our views or
explain the decision and we can’t help but wonder whether the fact that
Lord Harris has donated substantial sums to the Tory party is a
significant factor’.
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