Standing ovation for a 15 year old: education, education, education revisited?

Now that it's no longer possible to embed video clips from the Sky News website, it's becoming increasingly difficult to feature interesting speeches on this blog without directing readers elsewhere.

So if you want watch Joe Cotton, the 15 year old who won a standing ovation yesterday at the National Union of Teachers conference, you'll have to go HERE to the BBC website.

Or you can read, mark, inwardly digest and learn from the full script of his technically excellent speech below:

Can I just say thanks very much for having me.

I think it’s fantastic that students are getting opportunities like this to be heard.

My name’s Joe, I’m 15, I’m from Mytholmroyd and I go to Calder High School, the oldest comprehensive in Yorkshire.

Like many other young people, recent events have made me really aware of the effects that political decisions can have on my life.

At the moment, education as we know it is under threat.

Despite pledges and promises, tuition fees are trebling and vital schemes like SureStart and the Educational Maintenance Allowance are being axed.

Today, I'd like to stress how important it is that EMA at least is protected.

As I’m sure you all know; EMA is a small weekly payment to students from lower income families and it helps them to afford further education.

In the words of Nadine, one of the six-hundred-and-fifty-thousand college students who currently receive this allowance:

“EMA means I can go to college. Without it I just couldn’t manage.”

And it’s that simple.

Whether this money is spent on transport, books or food at lunchtime, it helps students to cope with the costs of college.

But the Government are scrapping it.

Why?

The official line, summarised by a government spokesperson is:

“In these tough economic times we simply do not have the luxury of being able to spend hundreds of millions on a programme that doesn’t see results in return for the majority of the money spent.”

So the Government believes that EMA is a wasteful luxury.

I don’t agree, and neither do 10 of the UK’s leading economists who in an open letter in the Guardian, they urged the chancellor to reconsider his proposal to scrap EMA.

They argue that students who receive EMA are more likely to go into higher paid jobs than they would have done without the scheme; and therefore pay more in taxes, claim less in benefits and contribute more to the economy and society.

In this way, EMA pays for itself.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies came to the same conclusion, and after thorough analysis of the scheme stated that “the cost of EMA is completely offset by its benefits”.

And yet the Government is scrapping it, and setting up a replacement scheme which will cut the money available by four hundred million pounds.

They claim that it will be better targeted.

Well, I don’t know how nifty Michael Gove thinks he can be with a loaf and some fishes, or even a bus pass and some textbooks, but he’d need nothing short of a miracle to replicate the benefits of EMA with that budget.

I’d just like to return to the words of that Government spokesperson, who says that EMA is a luxury.

Is it a luxury to ensure that all young people – regardless of the amount their parents earn - have access to education after the age of 16?

Is it not a duty, a responsibility, a principle that students from poorer families should be entitled to the same educational opportunities as richer students?

I believe that if even one student is unable to continue education based on their families income and not their ability, then the Government has failed in its responsibility to uphold basic rights to education.

Politicians always seem to talk about how much they value education, how it’s a priority, how it’s safe in their hands.

Well from where I'm standing it doesn’t look very safe at all.

How is cancelling EMA safeguarding education for 16 to 18 year olds?

And how is trebling university fees ensuring access to higher education?

It’s not.

This is why so many of us have taken to the streets in protest to stand up for our right to Education.

So please NUT, do all you can to help keep education accessible and affordable for my generation – and I promise that I’ll go home and start my GCSE revision.

Thank you.


'Inward clutter' in the Archbishop of Canterbury's Easter sermon

I recently posted the whole of the controversial lecture by the Archbishop of Canterbury on Sharia law, noting that it featured one of the longest spoken sentences (147 words) I've ever come across (HERE).

Thinking I may have been a little unfair in raising the question of whether it was the most boring and incomprehensible lecture ever, I thought that maybe he'd say something a little more intelligible in his Easter Day sermon today. Interestingly, however, his own website only posts the text of the sermon (HERE), thereby preventing the masses from watching the not very great communicator in action on video.

But there is a short clip on the Daily Telegraph website, to which I've added - for clarity, you understand - a transcript of his latest words of wisdom. Having watched it several times, I still haven't a clue about what he's talking about - but maybe it makes more sense to you:



... for many of us, most of us, like the disciples at Easter, it takes something of a shock to open us up to joy, some experience that pushes its way through the inward clutter by sheer force and novelty. So perhaps part of the message of Easter is very simply, 'Be ready to be surprised; try clearing out some of the anxiety and vanity and resentment so as to allow the possibility of a new world to find room in you.'

But this means in turn that rather than battling all the time to lay hold of a happiness that we have planned according to our fantasies, we should concentrate on challenging the things that make us anxious.

Gordon Brown: teaching, charity work or the adrenalin of power?

After losing the general election, Gordon Brown made some rather altruistic noises about his plans for the future, as was widely reported in the media at the time, including this from The Independent on 10th May 2010:

'In recent weeks, he has suggested that he might look for work in education or charity after leaving office.

'But many observers believe he will find it difficult to wean himself off the adrenalin of power and the intellectual challenge of high-level decision-making and may seek a role in an international institution.'

Less than a year later, with news that he's angling to become managing director of the IMF, the 'many observers' cited by The Independent turn out to have been rather closer to the mark than the worthy-sounding plans that Mr Brown already seems to have forgotten about.