steepholm: (Default)
steepholm ([personal profile] steepholm) wrote2010-01-16 05:15 pm
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There and Back Again

I went to visit my mother yesterday, and bought a Daily Telegraph for the train journey (only for the crossword - honest!). Anyway, after I'd given up on the puzzle I read this piece about the Equality Bill, which several of the Bishops in the House of Lords want to amend so that people will be able to refuse to do things that conflict with their conscience without being penalized in terms of employment. Thus:

Peers claimed that the Equality Bill should be altered to allow people to act according to their conscience when providing goods and services, in the same way that doctors are allowed to refuse to carry out abortions.

Bishop Scott-Joynt, the fifth most senior cleric in the Church of England, pointed out that similar exemptions had been requested but refused in the case of civil partnerships. A Christian registrar, Lilian Ladele, lost a case for unfair dismissal after she refused to carry out the ceremonies for homosexual couples.

The bishop said in a debate in the House of Lords: “The implication of the [conscience] amendment is that each of us... is bound to work as hard as we can to hold the whole range of different people's rights, because there is a sense around that some rights are better than others."


This "some rights are better than others" line strikes me as very unconvincing, not least because I can think of many examples of people's consciences conflicting with their work duties where no one else's rights are affected at all. For example, a vegan who works in an abbatoir, whose conscience won't let them be involved in the killing of animals. A pacifist in the SAS, whose conscience won't let them kill people. A person who works for Huntingdon Life Sciences but is against vivisection. Pacifists, vegans and anti-vivisectionists are all people of conscience for whom I have the greatest respect, even more than for those who believe homosexuality is a sin. So, would the bishops argue that all the people in these examples should be allowed to keep their jobs without penalty? And if not, why not? Am I missing some vital part of their argument?



Romsey School - Mission Statement

How times change! On the platform of Romsey station this morning I saw a poster advertising my old comp, though why a state school needs to advertise is beyond me. I see it's changed its name, from plain "Romsey School" to "The Romsey School" - presumably to sound more upmarket. There's a picture of some typical students, too, which, despite the town's being so white that visitors sometimes suffer snow blindness, tries for a multiracial image. "So that's what a black person looks like," is what I imagine the two kids either side of him are thinking. The school has even sprouted a mission statement:

The Romsey School is a community that aims for all...

  • To experience and enjoy new challenges and opportunities

  • To have a sense of belonging and pride in our school

  • To treat others with fairness, kindness and respect

  • To make healthy, informed and responsible choices

  • To be able to cope with life's ups and downs

  • To have a sense of awe and wonder

  • To acquire a lifelong love of learning

  • To be an active and caring citizen

  • To be successful

  • TO BE HAPPY



I can sign up to most of that list, but I rather wish they'd mentioned something about, say, being able to write a grammatical sentence, add up, and get some, like, you know, knowledge. But that's probably the influence of the Daily Telegraph.

[identity profile] lilliburlero.livejournal.com 2010-01-16 06:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, there is "lifelong love of learning". Mathematics fills me with awe and wonder, because I cannot even add up straight, and grammatical writing makes me very happy.

Seriously, though, after another week of supervising student teachers on placement (I go around and around singing miserere mei, deus) I think mission statements like this are the well-intentioned flagstones of the road to hell. They reinforce the belief -- very common among educators, especially ed. dept people, that education is something in and of itself, separate from any sort of content. I've seen so many lessons where classes full of rowdy children are managed expertly, but nothing is conveyed. That's not school. It's open prison.

[identity profile] steepholm.livejournal.com 2010-01-16 07:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I wondered about "lifelong love of learning", but found it all to easy to parse as "Trying to catch with all the stuff they didn't teach me at school because they were banging on about citizenship and positivity."

[identity profile] steepholm.livejournal.com 2010-01-16 08:03 pm (UTC)(link)
"all to easy".

Sometimes I wish I had a paid account, and could cover my shame...

[identity profile] lilliburlero.livejournal.com 2010-01-17 10:24 am (UTC)(link)
Is the figleaf worth $20 a year?

I suspected something similar. The termagant in me is exercised by misspelt and ungrammatical posters and displays being put up on classroom walls uncorrected. How can you learn when you're surrounded by Teh Wrong?