I’m sorry bsbWilliamson’s announcement is sending my anxiety through the roof about workload and COVID implications
if you've got a colleague who voted tory offer to make them a coffee and wank in it.
Stress relief and retribution in the flick of a wrist.
I'm joking.Erm no I didn’t it’s teaching a practical subject remotely
I’m sorry bsb
I'm joking.
Not sure what i will be asked to do. Wont ask for a few days so don't get asked to prep lol
Perhaps unsurprisingly hardly any teachers I know vote Tory
No there aintthere's always one contrary c**t in any situation.
there's always one contrary c**t in any situation.
Most of the country is in tier 4, the highest tier possible at present, so surely all those areas are very high rates of infection and therefore schools will be closed?Secondary schools and colleges in areas of England with very high rates of Covid infection rates will not open to all pupils in January, the education secretary says.
He is strongly hinting that schools will function basically as medical centres and staff to carry out tests. Then he goes on about world class education but still won’t let me teach properly. If you put teachers up the vaccination list then we actually could deliver one
there was a headmaster on the radio from a school in Essex who said they'd used every spare bit of space to set up for social distancing and keeping bubbles apart, now he's been told he has to create a testing area before they go back, it's a fucking shit show.
Yet they get it un the neck constantly form the Daily mail brigade. Wankers.
While I do get vaccinating the most vulnerable first, I am a bit surprised that key workers, who are expected to keep society functioning, aren't given some kind of priority.He is strongly hinting that schools will function basically as medical centres and staff to carry out tests. Then he goes on about world class education but still won’t let me teach properly. If you put teachers up the vaccination list then we actually could deliver one
While I do get vaccinating the most vulnerable first, I am a bit surprised that key workers, who are expected to keep society functioning, aren't given some kind of priority.
Are they not at all!While I do get vaccinating the most vulnerable first, I am a bit surprised that key workers, who are expected to keep society functioning, aren't given some kind of priority.
Yeah, I meant tbh not just teachers, but supermarket workers etc. too. Stick the people (and their families!) who have to go in first,the rest can wait.they are being, just teachers aren't included, which is ridiculous and an act of spite from the tories.
While I do get vaccinating the most vulnerable first, I am a bit surprised that key workers, who are expected to keep society functioning, aren't given some kind of priority.
Yeah, I meant tbh not just teachers, but supermarket workers etc. too. Stick the people (and their families!) who have to go in first,the rest can wait.
Although I suppose once you add families, that probably *is* just about everybody who's pushed out into society atm...
Ignore me, then(!)
Most of the country is in tier 4, the highest tier possible at present, so surely all those areas are very high rates of infection and therefore schools will be closed?
981 deaths is awful. Whoever decided to keep London tier 2 and to open up at Xmas should resign
Boris unsurprisingly is talking out of his arse again.Schools are safe, says Boris
Let me out of a fucking box then, says BSB
Nobody else has had to turn their place of work and job responsibility into that of a part time tester while being expected to do their normal job as well, unless I am mistaken.
The worst thing is Labour fecking agrees with it
Boris unsurprisingly is talking out of his arse again.
How come strike action is never mentioned in the education sector? I understand that some people won't want any actions to have a negative impact on the kids but I haven't worked in a sector that is so messed up.
Got to be honest, the academy I work for don't really seem to care about the kids anyway.
Like BSB said - there has been a narrative in the media over the last 10 years that education staff are lazy, overpaid and scared of hard work, so we don’t get supported by the public. Now we’ve even been sold out by the Leader of the Opposition - so now not even Labour have our backs.How come strike action is never mentioned in the education sector? I understand that some people won't want any actions to have a negative impact on the kids but I haven't worked in a sector that is so messed up.
Got to be honest, the academy I work for don't really seem to care about the kids anyway.
Certainly not my view but I think getting public support for a strike during a pandemic would be very tricky.education staff are lazy, overpaid and scared of hard work
Certainly not my view but I think getting public support for a strike during a pandemic would be very tricky.
As you say this is something where Labour should be totally behind the teachers.
Kier is too busy chasing the Daily Mail readers, who would actually prefer teachers and kids to catch Cov-ID so it’s fair.Certainly not my view but I think getting public support for a strike during a pandemic would be very tricky.
As you say this is something where Labour should be totally behind the teachers.
Kier is too busy chasing the Daily Mail readers, who would actually prefer teachers and kids to catch Cov-ID so it’s fair.
Labour run authority that were prepared to openly defy the Government. Sounds a ridiculous thing to say but is it that much of a stretch anymore? (Also notice how Labour backed the Government on this and not its own officials?)The situation in Greenwich is weird.
The local authority tried to close schools early before Christmas due to an increasing rate of infections. This resulted in the government threatening them with legal action and forcing them to stay open.
The government then shut schools early before Christmas due to an increasing rate of infections.
Couple of days ago a hospital under Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust declared a major incident and was turning people away.
On today’s list of London boroughs where the return to schools will be delayed Greenwich is nowhere to be seen. It has a higher rate of cases than areas that are on the list and the surrounding areas are on the list.
Make sense to anyone?
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