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Below are the 20 most recent journal entries recorded in user1951's LiveJournal:

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    Wednesday, June 11th, 2008
    11:05 pm
    Is 42 the answer to the ultimate question
    Those who support people getting locked up for doing nowt never think it will be them. Until it is (Pastor Neimoller)
    Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008
    9:07 am
    NUT opposes the BNP


    The NUT is non-party political - it does not fund any political party - but it does believe people who vote for the Bullies' and Nazis' Party should know what they are letting themselves in for.
    Monday, May 19th, 2008
    10:39 pm
    Scrap SATS
    There is a petition to scrap SATS on the Downing Street website

    Click here
    Saturday, May 17th, 2008
    4:53 am
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/poll/2008/may/16/sats.schools

    Guardian poll on SATS. Suddenly the politicians are waking up to what teachers have been telling them for decades: SATS are bad for education.


    Thursday, May 8th, 2008
    10:14 pm
    Feel this Gordon!
    The National Executive today unanimously agreed:

    1. to reaffirm its committment to the decision of annual conference to ballot members for discontinous action

    2. to discuss timescales for a ballot and also of forms of strike and non strike action at its next meeting in 2 weeks time.

    3. to seek a meeting with Govt to put forward our demands on pay and on workload.

    4. to congratulate div and assoc secs for the work done so far and encourage them to work for the petition ( deadline May 23rd) and the lobby of Parliament on June 9th.


    Discontinuous action means that the NUT will be able to act in UNISON with other unions in the public sector. The government has said it want to "listen" and "feel our pain" so feel this Gordon!
    Saturday, April 26th, 2008
    8:35 pm
    Socialism



    It is fair to say

    1) socialism has not failed it has not been tried.
    2) The serious question is whether capitalism can succeed - the present global crisis in food prices and finance markets should put a serious question mark over this.
    3) It is a downright lie to equate socialism and Stalinism.
    4) Even the most rabid republican is noticing that prices are rising faster than income and kids are being killed off in wars from which the corporations seek to profit. So they will vote for the Socialist alternative when it is presented to them even a rather tame "socialist" like Bernard Sanders
    Sunday, April 20th, 2008
    4:04 pm
    Verifiabilitiyify your nucular program
    "Verifiabilitiyify your nucular program" was one of many embarrassing remarks during which Gordon Brown had to keep a straight face and pretend to respect the President of the United States during his recent visit. Bush was talking about Iran, a country he cannot trust.

    Another country he cannot trust apparently is Al Qaeda although his face and his judgement did look a little clouded when he said this and he eventually conceded they were a group of people not a country but he still looked troubled. And anyone who thinks this man has his finger on the nuclear trigger probably feels a little troubled too.
    Sunday, April 6th, 2008
    12:43 pm
    Steve Sinnott 1951-2008
    More on http://classroom.teachers.blogspot.com
    NUT General Secretary, Steve Sinnott, died suddenly on 5 April, 2008. He was my age.

    Acting General Secretary, Christine Blower said: “Our hearts go out to Steve’s family at this sad time.

    I know that he would have wanted the Union to go ahead with all its campaigns because he believed in all of them with his heart as well as his head.

    At a later stage we will have the opportunity properly to remember Steve Sinnott, to honour his achievements and to celebrate his life.
    For now, the best way to mark our respect would be to maximise the effect of the campaigns to which he was so committed.”
    Friday, March 28th, 2008
    4:33 pm
    NUT conference Easter Miracle
    I thoroughly enjoyed NUT conference. Bill Greenshields’ presidential address was inspiring with its emphasis on the class basis of British society and his more-or-less unflappable demeanour made for a well-organised conference. Sometimes his avuncular chairmanship put me in mind of an uncle from my youth, Joe I think his name was.

    The way the conference worked, the Executive Priority motion meant most calls for action were ruled out of order. This gives the National Executive an enormous opportunity to display flexibility. With an apparent left numerical majority on the Exec (depending on how you calculate these things) they must prove to be our flexible friends and not the government’s.

    On Sunday on the tram there was a lot of talk about the Jerry Glazier Easter Miracle where Jerry apparently saw the light on the road to Damascus and ended up agreeing with Martin Powell-Davies on the need to link action on class size, workload and pay together.

    After the Classroom Teacher http:/classroomteacher.org.uk discussion on Sunday I look forward to April 24th and recruiting new activists from the first-time strikers who will be involved. The classroom teacher flyer will be available for people to download and print out

    The WSTA delegation had a gender balance of 7:2 which reflects the gender balance of the union. Other delegations can do likewise and perhaps the National Executive too.

    We recorded our thoughts on the conference blog http://wsta1.org.uk from which you will see that two first-time delegates who are supply teachers were moved to see the consideration the union is giving to their plight.
    Friday, February 8th, 2008
    10:00 pm
    Woodard Corporation snub parents and teachers
    From the WSTA blog http://wsta1.org.uk

    Teachers and Parents oppose academies.

    Teachers and Parents oppose academies.

    150 parents and teachers concerned about the threat to turn Littlehampton, Boundstone and King’s Manor into academies attended a meeting organised by the WSTA on Thursday 7th February..

    The local authority's spokesman Robert Back was listened to in polite silence. He argued that although Academies had been corrupt and inefficient in the past they would be very different now. He also argued that the academy was “the only game in town.” The private sponsors Woodard Corporation declined to send anyone to speak to us.


    Alistair Smith and Hank Roberts spoke on behalf of the NUT and got a very positive reception.

    Alistair pointed out the dangers of Academies where historically the Local Authority has lost all say in the running of the school with the LA having one governor and the sponsors having the lion’s share.

    He also stressed the social divisiveness of Academies. “Academies,” according to Lord Adonis, “are the 21st Century’s Grammar Schools.”

    Hank Roberts pointed out that sponsors generously donating two million pounds can get upwards of 18 million pounds of public money for their trouble and frequently excessive profits are made through “consultancy fees” and the provision of equipment for the school. “They are not sponsors but spongers.”

    Private businesses are colonising the state funded education system.

    Everyone who spoke from the floor was opposed to privatisation and not taken in by any of the promises.

    They rejected the arrogant assertion that "there is no alternative". This is not a spirit in which to conduct a consultation. It is undemocratic...and anyway it is something Margaret Thatcher used to say a lot.

    There was also discussion about the spread of religious schools without any popular demand. Hank warned of the proliferation of separate schools for children whose parents have different religious views and the potential divisiveness this will bring about.

    After an hour and half’s lively discussion people left the hall clearly disturbed by what they’d heard and still deep in discussion about the issues raised .

    \
    Thursday, January 24th, 2008
    10:15 pm
    Woodard corporation wage class war
    Teachers are up in arms about the proposal for the unelected Woodard Corporation to take over three schools in West Sussex.

    The stated aim of the Woodard Corporation is Class War. Its founder Nathaniel Woodard explicitly sought to educate the middle classes to keep the working classes in their place

    '... till the Church educates and trains up the middle classes, she can never effectually educate the poor'

    One hesitates to think what sort of admission policy these far-right Christians might have. Teaching on controversial issues like gay marriage, abortion or God forbid women priests would be a nightmare.

    However they are not having it all their own way. The following press statement from the West Sussex Teachers Association suggests opposition is growing:

    Teachers in West Sussex are planning a campaign against proposals to turn three of the County's secondary schools into Academies, starting with a Public Meeting on Thursday 7 February at 7.30pm in the Assembly Rooms, Worthing. Dave Thomas, local Secretary for the National Union of Teachers, said:
    We are opposed to Academies in West Sussex because:
    they undermine democratically controlled Local Authorities,
    they put schools in the hands of unaccountable sponsors,
    they threaten teachers' pay and working conditions,
    they will introduce three more schools of a faith character, with minimal consultation and a reduction in parents' choice.
    At a meeting of West Sussex NUT held on Wed 16th Jan, the following motion was passed unanimously:
    'WSTA is opposed to the establishment of Academies in West Sussex. It further deplores the lack of consultation by the Woodard Corporation and WSCC with the staff and their representatives in the schools concerned, namely, Boundstone CC, Kings Manor CC and Littlehampton CC.'
    The meeting was attended by NUT members from all three schools and from other schools throughout West Sussex.
    The public meeting is open to parents, teachers, support staff and others with an interest in state education to allow them an opportunity to air their concerns.
    Monday, January 14th, 2008
    8:33 pm
    Young Teachers can transform the NUT


    A group of teachers who backed Martin Powell-Davies’ recent stand in the NUT Vice-President election met on Saturday January 12th . The meeting discussed what needs to be done to build action to defend teachers’ pay, cut our relentless workload and to halt the break-up of local authority education.

    A leadership we can rely on

    One thing that still holds us back is the lack of a fighting union leadership that teachers can rely on to build the united action we need. Martin’s campaign helped keep up the pressure on the NUT Executive to call the promised national ballot for strike action on pay. We hope that the Executive will vote to get the ballot under way when they meet at the end of January. By then the Government should finally have announced the miserly salary awards that they expect us to put up with for 2008-2010.


    Building support for classroom teachers

    Most teachers, struggling with the daily grind in schools, will know nothing about the debates within the Union. But they know they need support in standing up to the demands of bullying managers and the pressures of observations, league tables and performance management. Hard-pressed school reps know they need support in organising their school group and explaining union campaigns in a way that grabs classroom teachers’ attention.
    Many hard-pressed Union Secretaries and officers will feel the same way. Too often left on their own to try and build school-by-school action in isolation, ground down by a rising mountain of individual casework, they also need support in building strong local Associations that can defend teachers and also to help bring in new members, especially young teachers, into activity.
    It’s this vital task, of helping to develop a strong network of classroom teachers, school reps and campaigning union officers that the meeting agreed had to be our first priority.

    A campaigning newsletter

    We agreed to build our network by launching a new campaigning newsletter, “Classroom Teacher”, to circulate to schools, both by e-mail and as printed copies that teachers can distribute to their colleagues. It will focus primarily on the main pay and conditions issues facing classroom teachers and the campaigns we can build to defend ourselves.

    The newsletter plans to be sharp and snappy, written by, and for, classroom teachers, reflecting the daily pressures we are under but also building confidence that together we can take action to turn the tide. We plan to put names to the articles reflecting the range of teachers involved in the network. At the same time, we hope to have room to include some more detailed commentary for teachers who also want to read something a bit more analytical about the problems we face. We also want to invite teachers to send in their own articles and comments and to be a real part of a growing network.

    We hope that the newsletter can develop in to a larger bulletin – which will mean appealing for finances too. It will certainly be regularly produced so that ‘Classroom Teacher’ will be there in staffrooms at least every half-term for teachers to read.

    A first flyer has been produced based on a Lewisham NUT newsletter “Too Much Work, Too Little Pay” which went down well at a recent national NUT Secretaries meeting. A further leaflet on the pay campaign should be out shortly.

    The ‘Classroom Teacher’ network

    The newsletter will advertise an e-mail, this blog and our website which will allow teachers to get in touch with the campaign and also post their own comments on our blog. We also have a Classroom Teacher account on youtube.

    We have also set up a classroom teacher e-group which will allow members of the network to easily contact each other and exchange views and information.

    We hope that teachers will forward our newsletter to colleagues and develop its circulation. We
    want to make sure we know where it is being read, get feedback on what teachers have thought of it but, above all, get new teachers to join the network and write their own comments and articles.

    Where there is support, we will also organise national or regional meetings around particular issues or campaigns so that we can bring teachers together and help plan a way forward. We can also produce material to be distributed at NUT Conference, although our main focus is going to be on classroom teachers rather than national NUT events.

    We hope this initiative can help build a network of classroom teachers working together to defend our colleagues and to build a union ready and prepared to take action to change our pay, our workload, our union and our schools.

    Contact:
    classroom.teacher@yahoo.co.uk
    Martin Powell-Davies 07946 445488
    Tuesday, December 4th, 2007
    8:31 am
    State Britain
    “State Britain”, (an irreverent reference to Tate Britain) recreates Brian Haw's anti-war protest in Parliament Square. It has won the Turner Prize although most of the media coverage references an earlier work by Mark Wallinger which amused the tabloids who could show him dressed as a teddy bear.



    "a bold political statement with art's ability to articulate fundamental human truths" is how the somewhat pompous judges described it. However Mark Wallinger praised Brian Haw's "tireless campaign against the folly and hubris of our government's foreign policy". He added: "Bring home the troops. Give us back our rights. Trust the people."



    He added: "I think it's regrettable that people have been so quiescent about what the Serious Organised Crime Act has done to people who want to demonstrate. It is against Magna Carta, and that was produced in 1215, before democracy. It's important these freedoms are fought for and preserved."

    The painstaking detail with which Mark Wallinger reproduced the protest meant it cost rather more than the 5000 pound prize itself but it is important that a protest which has been attacked with all the force of the corporations and their parliamentary mouthpieces has achieved this recognition.

    Tuesday, November 27th, 2007
    9:44 pm
    Oxford soft on Nazis, soft on the causes of Nazis
    The spirit of Chamberlain is alive in Oxford. The Oxford Union pick and choose who they honour. David Irving was imprisoned for voicing pro-Nazi views in Austria where it is illegal. Therefore the Oxford Union honoured him.

    Many people, British subjects and British residents, have been locked up without charge or trial in Guantanamo. The Oxford Union studiously ignores them.

    A wee bit two faced perhaps.

    Incidentally if fascists "must be allowed freedom of speech" would you say the same of paedophiles? Should they be offered a platform as well? I know people disagree with their views but surely the same argument would apply to them? It is a fake argument.

    And how much freedom do the liberal democrats expect to get in a BNP concentration camp as a reward for patronising Griffin?
    Wednesday, November 21st, 2007
    9:36 pm
    Wednesday, November 14th, 2007
    10:05 pm
    Monday, November 5th, 2007
    9:41 pm
    Friday, October 5th, 2007
    5:46 am
    Save the Princess Royal!
    Well that is a rather unusual sentiment for me. I mean the hospital not the parasite.


    Monday, September 24th, 2007
    11:24 am
    Monday, September 3rd, 2007
    3:54 pm
    Dihydrogen Monoxide
    I have just been reading this website about Dihydrogen Monoxide. Talk about scary. Apparently it is all over the place. It’s in our food and it is impossible to wash it off. It is used in poisons and in nuclear power plants and it kills thousands of people particularly if they go swimming because by now it is in the reservoirs and even in the sea.

    Worrying eh?

    (with apologies to everybody)
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