It's July!

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Expand view Topic review: It's July!

Re: It's July!

by goodlookingone » Mon Jul 31, 2017 7:19 pm

Washing up... I have been economising on food, so if I have enough plates, it can wait another month....
Pondering on a visit to airshow: No longer at Sunny Southend, but round the Coast to Clacton.. Just seen the bus times - Strewth, They must be economising on bus speeds...

Re: It's July!

by Rwth of Cornovii » Mon Jul 31, 2017 2:48 pm

What about the washing up? I've had my cleaners in this morning so I can relax for a bit. They cleaned my windows on the outside, so now the people opposite can see me. Mostly there's a bit of a hedge, and one lot is away most of the time, but I don't wear much indoors.

Re: It's July!

by goodlookingone » Mon Jul 31, 2017 1:00 pm

Oh dear, is it the 31th... I'd better see if I can cet theis damn printer working, and pay some bills.

Re: It's July!

by An Tarbh Dubh » Mon Jul 31, 2017 12:45 pm

We're still here, and as well as can be expected. I just don't post that often, and 3Wells is usually to be found in "The Cellar" (on the Ambridge Reporter site), and here and there in Peets ... more occasionally here. 3Wells isn't really fully recovered from her last problems but is getting there, and I have been exceptionally busy, but things are a little quieter now for a week or two.

Hope everyone else is keeping well and cheerfully occupied. Someone will have to start a new August thread tomorrow :-).

Re: It's July!

by Brians Cravat » Mon Jul 31, 2017 11:00 am

Good morning all (If there's any one there, that is!)

Sorry to read of ailing computers.

Busy week ahead though, not today. Today is definitely a 'feet up, watching the cricket' sort of day. It all starts tomorrow with OH and I die to sit on five Education Admission Appeals Panels, taking us through to Friday. Average of 22 individual appeals for each panel to hear. We've spent most of the weekend going through the documentation. In their submissions, asking us to change the Council's decision to deny their child(ren) a place at their chosen school, parents are asked to detail their case. Some can barely muster five lines while other manage two or three pages of A4. They will also often add, several pages of of 'supporting evidence (Letters from Doctors, nursery teachers etc.) It takes some working through and, if you're going to do a decent job, it all has to be studied.

Any evidence of the Ebony Bull and Wellsy? Just hope that both are well.

Enjoy your days people.

Re: It's July!

by goodlookingone » Sat Jul 29, 2017 11:14 pm

Spoke too soon --- Pooter conked out again. (I think too many neighbours using too much currents).
...and ... Why are bods offering me Insurance, Mortgages, Using my car as security for a loan (bet they havn't seen my car) or Money making schemes that are all in Dollars?
I'm off to examin the insides of my eyelids...

Goodnight each.

Re: It's July!

by goodlookingone » Sat Jul 29, 2017 11:08 pm

After PooterMender repairing pooter it has only taken a couple of days to get it working (AExcept the back-up, ... and the Security Thingy.... and the Sound. ... All I needs to do now is to reconnect the Printer - seems to have a pooter link with a different model to what mine was/is... Only another couople of days work ...... SCREEEEEEM...

Re: It's July!

by goodlookingone » Thu Jul 27, 2017 8:19 pm

I have caught up.. Although this Batchelor didn't have much to add to Schools. My last involvement at schools was in Local Gov. I was NOT impressed by schoolteachers.
Decorating: I fear unwellness over the last few years has limited my thoughts, interests, and cash-flow. But I am now back to De-Cluttering - Fifty years of work being shredded, but where to keep the plastic sacks of shredded papers? I had eight bags to keep in the house - Access to the garden would add slugs and rainwater to the bags which I should have to be taken through the house to the courtyard (Walled Garden, no gates, no storage at the front - just a communial courtyard/footpath) Got rid of the eight bags this a.m., and now can start on the next lot. Decoration will be paused until I have some working space.
An oddity: Neighbours opposite side of courtyard moved their furniture out into the public space. I wonder about how they chose to live in a house (with a garden) put like to live publicly - I never understood people. I wonder what the Foxesthink of rain-sodden sofa's, toys, paving covered in dog-ends... I wish I could afford to move.

Re: It's July!

by goodlookingone » Thu Jul 27, 2017 6:39 pm

Thanks Brian - I have much catching up to do.. Finding e-mail is difficult to locate.

Re: It's July!

by Brians Cravat » Thu Jul 27, 2017 6:24 pm

Greetings GLO. Receiving you loud and clear.

Re: It's July!

by goodlookingone » Thu Jul 27, 2017 6:15 pm

Hi each - pooter been at Menders. Just trying to see If I'm Making contact. All my Board Names and Passwords gone AWOL.

Re: It's July!

by Brians Cravat » Thu Jul 27, 2017 4:10 pm

Well, last night's talk at the local library was excellent. Michael Taylor is a super speaker as he took the audience of fifty or so through the trials and tribulations of becoming and remaining an author. Think that I said yesterday that, he specialises in 'family sagas'. This is not a genre that I particularly like but, there is a ready market out there for his books and he seems to make a reasonable living producing these books. He has recently changed publishers and, this has coincided with 'a painless sex-change'. His new publisher is keen to break into the US market where, these books sell quite well. However, this has involved Michael changing the titles of his novels and, he now writes under the name of 'Nancy Carson'. This 'deception' goes as far a the creation of a website and blog in the name of Nancy Carson. It's a strange world in which we live.

Re: It's July!

by Brians Cravat » Wed Jul 26, 2017 5:17 pm

I used to quite enjoy decorating. In particular, I found painting quite absorbing. The attraction I guess was that it took all of my concentration and, I could just lose my self painting a window. Wall papering was less enjoyable but, I did do it. Sadly, as my arthritic knees worsened, I could no longer comfortably stand for long periods.

These days, we tend to get people in. To that end we have been very fortunate in finding two ladies in the Age Concern Tradespersons booklet. These two ladies are in the forties and sill have children at school. If they say "We'll be here tomorrow at 9:15."it is set in stone and you can rely on it. They clean up after themselves, even asking for our Dyson to vacuum round before they leave in the afternoon.

Girls have now gone home and our evening meal is under way. We're due at the local library at 7:00 pm to listen to a local author, Michael Taylor. He writes 'family sagas' all set in our local town Dudley. I don't find his books at all interesting but, he sells well locally. I enjoy seeing authors because, I find their thoughts on the creative process compelling.

Enjoy your evenings all.

Re: It's July!

by Rwth of Cornovii » Wed Jul 26, 2017 2:14 pm

Hello, it has been raining here also and I was somewhat distrait. My handyman is going to come tomorrow to paint/condition the cladding that was replaced after the insulation was put on. He was due to come this morning but rang last night to delay until tomorrow. Fortunately, I had bought the fence paint over a year ago thinking I could do it myself, but I couldn't. I used to be able to do these jobs, but painting my bedroom, now study was moderately disastrous. Nice colour, but I missed a few bits and could only reach with the extended handle roller. I know you can get mini rollers, which I may do soon, but I don't feel like it to tell the truth and I don't usually look up there. I may have a man in to redecorate in due course, but no rush. I think I'll wait until Autumn. It's mostly the odds and ends, because mostly it is OK. My cleaners' agent said "Mimosa is quite nice, I love it." but it's not what I like. I had to paint the bedroom. It was pink. Now it's green with pink highlights.

Re: It's July!

by Brians Cravat » Wed Jul 26, 2017 10:19 am

Thinking has changed regarding helping children develop skills before they attend school. In fact, courses for parents run locally to introduce them to modern teaching methods like 'phonics'. There isn't the rather snooty attitude to what children read that persisted when our children went through school. I really didn't care if they read the back of cornflake packets, just as long as they read.

Today, there are some wonderful books for children of all ages with authors like Julia Donaldson and Michael Rosen produce really good books for children, to name but a few.

We're child-minding today and, a game of 'Junior Monopoly' is proceeding as I write this. Sadly, it's raining heavily outside and, we can't do what we did on Monday and take them for a long walk.

Enjoy

Re: It's July!

by Rwth of Cornovii » Tue Jul 25, 2017 3:26 pm

I don't think I went to as much trouble as that. Teachers asked would say "Don't teach them anything before they come to school", which I understood meant no reading writing or arithmetic. She was read to, and lots of books were around the house. But she could tie her own shoe laces and this would take a lot of time in school tying other children's gym shoe laces until I said to teach them to do their own. She used to spend her pocket money on sweets on the way into school then buy some for herself on the way home out of the profits from selling her stock in school. The whole extended family were interested in books and science and conversation was fairly lively and I'm sure the rapid turnover of library books including children's was exemplary. I used to swop a few Alan Garner, Malcolm Saville and Susan Cooper books for one of the rather similar crop of pony books she used to choose. She was reading Dumas at 11 years old, and read the 'Count of Monte Cristo' before I did.

I did try to supplement things a little, but usually when the school was remiss like taking them to the same safari park 3 years in succession for a school trip. My mother used to take her to the theatre to see the ballet and plays. I took her to see the ballet as well. I encouraged her in her A levels, by reading similar material at the same time, and making the New Scientist available to her. She did get to Manchester Poly to do Librarianship and has had a pretty good career since, but hit the glass ceiling in her National charity job.

Re: It's July!

by Brians Cravat » Mon Jul 24, 2017 3:36 pm

Rwth, as someone who has seen our three children through the education system and, been governor for over thirty years, has been the decline in the view that education is a collaboration between school and home. Back when our children were going through school, we both took an active interest in their education, checking homework, attending meetings with teachers and listening to them reading. It actually goes further than that because we worked wupith our children before they reached school age. All three did really well educationally.

These days children arrive in Nursery and even, Reception classes unable to communicate verbally. This is undoubtedly due to anrange of factors: the parents don't talk to their children being on their mobile phones constantly, the children are put in front of the TV at every opportunity to watch cheap American-made cartoons, there are no books in the house nor, is there are evidence that children are read to at home. That said, when little Jeremy and Jemima cannot read adequately by the age of seven or eight, the tendency is for the parents to blame the school!

They fail to recognise that, the school has to spend valuable time in Early Years teaching children to communicate verbally before committing to developing reading skills. At our school, this has necessitated the introduction of a nationalprogramme called 'Every Child a Talker'. The fact that this is a national programme indicates that this is not a localised problem.

My view has always been that the ability to read is the primary skill that all children need to develop. Once that has been developed the rest of learning is open.

It is interesting that our three year-old granddaughter attends full-time nursery which is part of the infants and primary that she will subsequently attend. She does, as part of her school day 'Phonics' to help develop her literacy and, other skill development exercises to develop her numeracy skills.

Re: It's July!

by Rwth of Cornovii » Sun Jul 23, 2017 11:25 pm

I still think that my plan to ask friends in the area who were teachers to recommend a school was pretty good. I thought they would be more up to date than an OFSTED report. And I thought I was at least halfway responsible for trying to ensure that any areas of difficulty were ironed out. DD was terrible at maths. Her friend at the next desk was also terrible, but in a different way. Their teacher said that if you could knock the two together you might make a good mathematician so I encouraged her to study with the other child to try to help each other. Parental help was certain to be old fashioned and no help at all. Let's just hope that the SATS change soon and GCSE's aren't artificially made more difficult and less relevant.

Re: It's July!

by Brians Cravat » Sun Jul 23, 2017 6:40 pm

Rwth of Cornovii wrote:It would be nice to think that the parents who care enough to choose the 'best' school also cared enough to follow the children through their school careers helping them to understand the inexplicable. I'd like to think I supported my daughter by asking teachers of my acquaintance to recommend the school they would send their children to. We worked out that we lived close enough to get her in there without having to appeal. The house we bought subsequently was previously owned by the parents of a classmate so we didn't cheat, though their daughter spookily came down the day we viewed the house with our daughter's school blouse in her hands.
I hope your fellow panellist recovered her health when she got home. The Trojan horse schools must be a terrible worry. If the governors were prepared to act properly regarding inclusiveness for all pupils it would be fine, but it isn't. They segregate the childre and don't teach them anything approaching an equality approach.
Rwth, the ideal would be that all schools were 'outstanding'. Obviously, that isn't going to be the case. In my view, the introduction of OFSTED inspections and SATs and, incorporating these into league tables hasn't had the desired effect of improving school standards. I believe that idea was parents of those schools requiring improvement would come under pressure from parents to achieve that improvement. In truth, parents only look at these measures when they are looking at a school for their child to attend.

The problem with using OFSTED grades as an indicator is that, the result could be three years old. As such, they may not reflect how good a school is at that moment.

Re: It's July!

by goodlookingone » Sat Jul 22, 2017 1:02 pm

Pooter off to Menders - so if you don't see me here....

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