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Stressing Our Teachers To Breaking Point

 
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fish5133
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PostPosted: Mon Jan 26, 2009 10:25 pm    Post subject: Stressing Our Teachers To Breaking Point Reply with quote

The Govt seem to come up regularly with wonderful new ideas that they want school teachers to implement. The latest being lets start teaching 7 year old Spanish. Well that by itself may not be that bad a idea but its not replacing any existing subjects just adding to them.
Ive watched my better half slowly get submerged in all the curriculum changes and beaurocracy, targets, sats, school inspections as well as a class of 33 consisting of "ordinary" kids to kids with dyslexia, aspergers, adhd, "demon possession" and kids who cant cope with seeing their gay father snogging his boyfriend and worse.
Replicate this across the country and just wait for the bubble to burst.

Just another way to keep the masses down

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IanFantom
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PostPosted: Tue Jan 27, 2009 1:00 pm    Post subject: Re: Stressing Our Teachers To Breaking Point Reply with quote

Do you have a link to the initiative on teaching 7-year-olds Spanish?
fish5133 wrote:
The Govt seem to come up regularly with wonderful new ideas that they want school teachers to implement. The latest being lets start teaching 7 year old Spanish.
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fish5133
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PostPosted: Tue Jan 27, 2009 6:42 pm    Post subject: Re: Stressing Our Teachers To Breaking Point Reply with quote

IanFantom wrote:
Do you have a link to the initiative on teaching 7-year-olds Spanish?
fish5133 wrote:
The Govt seem to come up regularly with wonderful new ideas that they want school teachers to implement. The latest being lets start teaching 7 year old Spanish.


Hi Ian

I think the legislation has been out for a while and training courses have been set up to prepare teachers. its being phased in with 2010 being the date they hope all primary schools are up to speed. It started in my wifes school today

Quote:
Schools also have to teach religious education, though parents have the right to withdraw children for all or part of the religious education curriculum. In addition, schools are advised to teach personal, social and health education (PSHE) and citizenship, together with at least one modern foreign language

http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Parents/Schoolslearninganddevelopment/Exam sTestsAndTheCurriculum/DG_4015959

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fish5133
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 16, 2009 12:24 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

still more

Quote:
More teachers 'suffer breakdowns'
Sunday, April 12 06:05 pm

Teachers' mental health is increasingly being put at risk by the pressures heaped on them during school time, union leaders said.


Half of all teachers have considered leaving the profession due to stress, citing the long hours, excessive workload, lack of support and poor pupil behaviour, according to the National Union of Teachers (NUT) teacher mental health working party.

In addition, a large-scale HSE survey found teaching to be the most stressful occupation in the UK, it said.

The working party was set up following a resolution proposed at the NUT's conference three years ago by John Illingworth, a primary school headteacher from Nottingham, who told of his own breakdown.

The NUT on Sunday debated a resolution on the evidence collected by the working party at the union's annual conference in Cardiff.

Mr Illingworth said: "Unmanageable workload, violence, excessive monitoring, disruptive pupils, constant change and workplace bullying - these aren't just stresses, these are teachers' stresses. Stresses endemic in our profession which lead to the haemorrhaging of teachers from our schools, teachers reducing their work hours just to cope, mental illness, and in some cases even to suicide."

He added: "Depression, anxiety and burnout have become the teacher's disease, although often it remains hidden."

Mr Illingworth called for health and safety legislation to be properly followed in every school.

"Every school should carry out stress risk assessment," he said. "Every headteacher should be properly trained in carrying this out. Instead of training school leaders in how to bully staff, the National College for School Leadership would be better in training them in their duty of care."

The resolution, which was later passed, highlighted the fact that Ofsted remains a major source of stress for teachers. It called for the union's executive to continue to press government and employers to recognise the true extent of stress in teaching, and be more pro-active in tackling the problem of mental health issues in the profession.

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Stephen
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 23, 2009 1:05 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Fish, there are a lot more children with dyslexia than most relise, and thats were a lot of problems come from. the kids just think they are think and just play the fool or get embarased talking about there differculties. The dyslexic numbers are covered up or ignored.
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Pugwash
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 23, 2009 6:27 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Perhaps the national Curriculum for schools maybe interpreted as an infringement on freedoms. If so, it is a tentative link.

While it is recognised that some pupils may have less developed ability for literacy, others may have a less developed capacity for numeracy. The term dyslexia is not an exact medical condition (at what point of literate failure brands a child dyslectic?). This term is ONLY applied to scholars of the English Language. If a child cannot read or write they are illiterate. And, children that are illiterate are a problem to be dealt with. Too often dyslexia can be used as an excuse for not only the pupils themselves but also parents and teachers.

Having lived in Spain for a number of years, I consider that learning a modern language at an early age has some merit. Children of six and seven (who are immersed in a language) have no inhibitions in communications, the fact that they get words wrong is not a matter of embarrassment but an incentive to try again. Children of twelve upwards have a much harder time picking up the language.

Just a point on the English language, why is dyslexia difficult to spell, stutter start with a 'st' and lisp have a 'sp' ending.
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scubadiver
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PostPosted: Fri May 22, 2009 3:24 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I found out a couple of days ago my maths teacher at secondary school has had a mental breakdown.

When teachers have a passion for teaching, the last thing they want is loads of bureaucratic paperwork.

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IanFantom
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PostPosted: Fri May 22, 2009 4:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

What is happening in the teaching profession seems to follow a similar general pattern to the one I flagged up for the current expenses frenzy in the Commons, except that instead of 'Regulation reduced' read 'Regulation increased':

Quote:

1. Regulation reduced
2. Regulatory body messes up
3. Chaos
4. Media frenzy
5. State jumps in to save the day

http://www.911forum.org.uk/board/viewtopic.php?p=134844

scubadiver wrote:
I found out a couple of days ago my maths teacher at secondary school has had a mental breakdown.

When teachers have a passion for teaching, the last thing they want is loads of bureaucratic paperwork.


I think that must be true of a lot of people in similar situations: teaching profession, financial services, public service positions, political parties and voluntary organisations.

Just seeing the bigger picture might help, though.

Regards, Ian.
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IanFantom
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PostPosted: Fri May 22, 2009 4:37 pm    Post subject: Re: Stressing Our Teachers To Breaking Point Reply with quote

On the teaching of Spanish, I think you are referring to the National Strategy for Languages in England. I followed this as it was going through the Lords, and was reporting on it in a newsletter ( http://www.esperanto.org/uk/eabnetnews/ ), and we started building up a programme for reintroducing Esperanto into schools.

The Esperanto activity was turned into a decoy, as the association went into melt-down, and I realised that it was a project destined to failure.

Then I realised that that could be true for the National Strategy for Languages itself. It was foreseeable that that programme would result in a collapse in language learning in secondary schools. Language teachers were crying out loud for the Government not to remove compulsory language teaching at Key Stage 4. The Government took no notice. There was no attempt to halt the subsequent melt-down.

Then I read Clare Short's book 'An Honorable Deception?' ( http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0743263928/ref=sr_1_2 ). She describes projects of hers which were 'destined to failure'. That, it seems, was quite normal under Tony Blair. My suspicions had become quite credible.

It seems, again, that we have a similar model:

Quote:
1. Regulation reduced
2. Regulatory body messes up
3. Chaos
4. Media frenzy
5. State jumps in to save the day


http://www.911forum.org.uk/board/viewtopic.php?p=134844

I think we're in stage 3 at the moment.

Why would they do it? Well, Gordon Brown wants English as the language of a militaristic New World Order, and the dumber our people are with languages in the EU the more the brits can push their own language. That's hardly what I would call 'harmonisation'. See my newsletter for more stories on this.


fish5133 wrote:
IanFantom wrote:
Do you have a link to the initiative on teaching 7-year-olds Spanish?
fish5133 wrote:
The Govt seem to come up regularly with wonderful new ideas that they want school teachers to implement. The latest being lets start teaching 7 year old Spanish.


Hi Ian

I think the legislation has been out for a while and training courses have been set up to prepare teachers. its being phased in with 2010 being the date they hope all primary schools are up to speed. It started in my wifes school today

Quote:
Schools also have to teach religious education, though parents have the right to withdraw children for all or part of the religious education curriculum. In addition, schools are advised to teach personal, social and health education (PSHE) and citizenship, together with at least one modern foreign language

http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Parents/Schoolslearninganddevelopment/Exam sTestsAndTheCurriculum/DG_4015959
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