Tuesday 25 August 2020

Back to school?

The government's PR machine is in full swing with a carefully choreographed campaign to try to ensure a smooth opening of the new school year.  All four Chief Medical Officers (one each for England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland) were "put up" (I believe is the phrase) on Sunday to  to assure us that that the children would be, if not perfectly safe, then almost, and that keeping them out of school would be far worse for their mental and physical health than would the danger of catching the virus, which is less likely than getting run over on the way to school.  I wonder if they tested that conclusion by an algorithm?

A former government chief scientific advisor, Sir David King, was more cautious and said that: "It’s important that we focus on elimination before opening schools . . . .. That doesn’t mean hurting the economy - just hurting the virus better."





9 comments:

  1. One solution which would reduce the danger is to take in only half classes, either one half in the morning and the other in the afternoon, or one half one week and one the next. This ,of course, would not have the advantage of releasing all the parents and carers to return to their jobs, though an adjustment to the furlough scheme would help.

    More importantly, it would not deliver anywhere near the needed quality of education to an entire generation of pupils who, thanks to the obstructionism of the teaching unions before the summer, have all been out of school for six months.

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    1. As I say in the post, I agree with he unions on this. They have not been obstructive, just tried to achieve the safest possible environments for adults to work in.

      Half classes should lead to more effective classroom teaching, permit additional work to be done in the pupils' own time, and would induce an added sense of urgency, so there could be educational gains rather than losses.

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    2. As I say in the post, I agree with he unions on this

      Have you ever disagreed with a union? About anything?

      Half classes should lead to more effective classroom teaching, permit additional work to be done in the pupils' own time, and would induce an added sense of urgency, so there could be educational gains rather than losses.

      Teaching kids every other day or every other week means that they will forget everything they learnt by the time they get back, so half or more of every class will have to be wasted going over what was done last time. It would be worse than pointless.

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    3. With morning and afternoon shifts they'd all be taught every day.

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    4. With morning and afternoon shifts they'd all be taught every day.

      So, what, at lunchtime half the school will be leaving while the other half arrives? How on Earth could that work? Especially if you're obsessed with social distancing — you'd need a one-way system capable of taking the entire school population through it in the space of about half an hour. Including all the ones who are misbehaving, the ones who stop to adjust their clothes, the ones who realise they've forgotten something and try to go backwards… you're in cloud-cuckoo land if you think that's in any way practical. Or you've just entirely forgotten everything about what it's like to be in a school.

      Plus, they wouldn't be being taught every class every day, each day they'd only be being taught half their classes, so you haven't solved the main problem that they would be having long gaps between successive classes in each subject, and so half of each class would be wasted catching up.

      So you've managed to create a whole new problem of logistics in trying to push the entire school through one-way bottlenecks every day, while not actually solving the original problem.

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    5. Well, the under-developed Malawi managed a change-over at lunchtime each day for full classes so I'm sure developed world beating Britannia can manage it for half classes.

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    6. Well, the under-developed Malawi managed a change-over at lunchtime each day for full classes

      I'm guessing, though, that given the climate their schools are constructed rather differently? With, perhaps, fewer narrow corridors and tight staircases?

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    7. Would you believe it, the Department of Education's "Guidance," published last night, too late for the morning papers and just two days before the schools reopen, suggests that pupils might attend on a rota basis? Must have been reading Keynesian Liberal

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