Wednesday 30 December 2020

the prussian school system and the factory model of education

Have we all gone through what is essentially a 'Prussian' education system?

Jay Doubleyou: the purpose of education: from china to prussia to the united states

And has the purpose of that been to make us stupid?

Jay Doubleyou: education: dumbing us down

And to prepare us for the factory system?

Jay Doubleyou: human resources as social engineering

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This is a very provocative idea.

Here's it is challenged - but the author still suggests we are being socially engineered:

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The Invented History of 'The Factory Model of Education'

Audrey Watters on 25 Apr 2015

“What do I mean when I talk about transformational productivity reforms that can also boost student outcomes? Our K–12 system largely still adheres to the century-old, industrial-age factory model of education. A century ago, maybe it made sense to adopt seat-time requirements for graduation and pay teachers based on their educational credentials and seniority. Educators were right to fear the large class sizes that prevailed in many schools. But the factory model of education is the wrong model for the 21st century.” – US Secretary of Education Arne Duncan (2010)

One of the most common ways to criticize our current system of education is to suggest that it’s based on a “factory model.” An alternative condemnation: “industrial era.” The implication is the same: schools are woefully outmoded.

As edX CEO Anant Agarwal puts it, “It is pathetic that the education system has not changed in hundreds of years.” The Clayton Christensen Institute’s Michael Horn and Meg Evan argue something similar: “a factory model for schools no longer works.” “How to Break Free of Our 19th-Century Factory-Model Education System,” advises Joel Rose, the co-founder of the New Classrooms Innovation Partners. Education Next’s Joanne Jacobs points us “Beyond the Factory Model.” “The single best idea for reforming K–12 education,” writes Forbes contributor Steve Denning, ending the “factory model of management.” “There’s Nothing Especially Educational About Factory-Style Management,” according to the American Enterprise Institute’s Rick Hess.

I’d like to add: there’s nothing especially historical about these diagnoses either. ...

Despite these accounts offered by Toffler, Brooks, Khan, Gatto, and others, the history of schools doesn’t map so neatly onto the history of factories (and visa versa). As education historian Sherman Dorn has argued, “it makes no sense to talk about either ‘the industrial era’ or the development of public school systems as a single, coherent phase of national history.” ...

As Dorn notes, phrases like “the industrial model of education,” “the factory model of education,” and “the Prussian model of education” are used as a “rhetorical foil” in order make a particular political point – not so much to explain the history of education, as to try to shape its future. ...

Many education reformers today denounce the “factory model of education” with an appeal to new machinery and new practices that will supposedly modernize the system. That argument is now and has been for a century the rationale for education technology. As Sidney Pressey, one of the inventors of the earliest “teaching machines” wrote in 1932 predicting "The Coming Industrial Revolution in Education," ...

Pressey, much like Sal Khan and other education technologists today, believed that teaching machines could personalize and “revolutionize” education by allowing students to move at their own pace through the curriculum. The automation of the menial tasks of instruction would enable education to scale, Pressey – presaging MOOC proponents – asserted.

We tend to not see automation today as mechanization as much as algorithmization – the promise and potential in artificial intelligence and virtualization, as if this magically makes these new systems of standardization and control lighter and liberatory.

And so too we’ve invented a history of “the factory model of education” in order to justify an “upgrade” – to new software and hardware that will do much of the same thing schools have done for generations now, just (supposedly) more efficiently, with control moved out of the hands of labor (teachers) and into the hands of a new class of engineers, out of the realm of the government and into the realm of the market.
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The Invented History of 'The Factory Model of Education'

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This is the potted history from Wikipedia:

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The Prussian educational reforms inspired other countries and remains important as a biopower in the Foucaultian sense for nation-building.[1]

The Prussian legacy of a mainly tripartite system of education with less comprehensive schooling and selection of children as early as the fourth grade has led to controversies that persist to the present.[39] It has been deemed to reflect 19th-century thinking along class lines.[40]

Prussian education system - Wikipedia

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Here's another view:

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How to Break Free of Our 19th-Century Factory-Model Education System

JOEL ROSE MAY 9, 2012

A technology and education entrepreneur gazes into the future of the classroom

More than 150 years ago, Massachusetts became the first state to provide all of its citizens access to a free public education. Over the next 66 years, every other state made the same guarantee. The result was a publicly-funded system where, in every American classroom, groups of about 28 students of roughly the same age are taught by one teacher, usually in an 800 square-foot room. This model has been the dominant archetype ever since.

It's a factory-model classroom. Inspired in part by the approach Horace Mann saw in Prussia in 1843, it seemed to adequately prepare American youth for the 20th century industrialized economy. But in 1983, the federal government declared in A Nation At Risk that our system was starting to slide.

The year 1983 was also seminal for the technology industry. Microsoft released MS Word and Apple introduced the new Apple IIe. Some predicted that the demand for better schools, coupled with the supply of computers and new software, would soon revolutionize our nation's classrooms.

It didn't quite happen.

Schools did move to adopt new technologies -- computers and software, increased bandwidth, and infrastructure. But there is scant research-based evidence that these tools have had the exponential impact on public education many anticipated.

Given the enormous impact that technology has had on nearly every other aspect of our society, how can that be?

WITH LOVE FROM PRUSSIA

Perhaps it is because educational tools that have come into our classrooms over the last couple of decades, whether technology or otherwise, continue to be used within a school structure that is virtually unchanged since the mid-nineteenth century.

That model was imported from Prussia with a different purpose in mind. Horace Mann's free school movement stemmed less from a belief in the economic or moral imperative of education for all children and more from a desire to simply create a tolerant, civilized society.

Mann grew up in Massachusetts during the early part of the 19th century, where religious tension between Protestants and Catholics dominated public life. Parochial schools, in his view, only reinforced these divisions. The Prussian model, on the other hand, was designed to build a common sense of national identity.

Applied back home, Mann thought, large groups of students learning together would help to blur the divisions among religious groups and establish a more unified and egalitarian society. And as that model became the American blueprint, Mann's vision ultimately became the foundation for our national system of schooling.

Mann's vision also made sense for the industrial age in which he lived. The factory line was simply the most efficient way to scale production in general, and the analog factory-model classroom was the most sensible way to rapidly scale a system of schools. Factories weren't designed to support personalization. Neither were schools.

TOOLS AREN'T ENOUGH

Today our collective vision for education is broader, our nation is more complex and diverse, and our technical capabilities are more powerful. But we continue to assume the factory-model classroom and its rigid bell schedules, credit requirements, age-based grade levels, and physical specifications when we talk about school reform.

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How to Break Free of Our 19th-Century Factory-Model Education System - The Atlantic

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And finally:

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The modern education system was designed to teach future factory workers to be “punctual, docile, and sober”

By Allison Schrager

June 29, 2018

The education system as we know it is only about 200 years old. Before that, formal education was mostly reserved for the elite. But as industrialization changed the way we work, it created the need for universal schooling.

Factory owners required a docile, agreeable workers who would show up on time and do what their managers told them. Sitting in a classroom all day with a teacher was good training for that. Early industrialists were instrumental, then, in creating and promoting universal education. Now that we are moving into a new, post-industrial era, it is worth reflecting on how our education evolved to suit factory work, and if this model still makes sense.

“Factory schools,” as they are now called, originated in early 19th-century Prussia. For the first time, education was provided by the state and learning was regimented. Dozens of students at a time were placed in grades according to their age, and moved through successive grades as they mastered the curriculum. They took an industrialized approach to education: impersonal, efficient, and standardized.

As Northwestern University economist Joel Mokyr explains it (pdf):

"Much of this education, however, was not technical in nature but social and moral. Workers who had always spent their working days in a domestic setting, had to be taught to follow orders, to respect the space and property rights of others, be punctual, docile, and sober. The early industrial capitalists spent a great deal of effort and time in the social conditioning of their labor force, especially in Sunday schools which were designed to inculcate middle class values and attitudes, so as to make the workers more susceptible to the incentives that the factory needed."

The industrial revolution created jobs that had ever existed before. For previous generations, Mokyr describes, artisans and farmers mostly worked out of their homes and set their own hours.

The transition to factory work was unpleasant, to put it mildly. The idea that men had to show up and take orders from a boss—someone they were not even related to—was demeaning and emasculating. Factory conditions were often terrible and completely changed how people organized their days. Time was no longer their own.

Economists Oded Galor and Omer Moav argue (pdf) that Prussian factory-style schools caught on across the West as the spread of industrialization created a need for compliant, literate workers. Industrialists led the charge to adopt universal education in the US, UK, and elsewhere in Europe. Factory owners were among the biggest champions for the Elementary Education Act 1870, which made education universally available in England.

In a post-industrial world, education may require an equally bold rethink. It might mean more comprehensive adult education, or regular retraining, to keep skills sharp as old jobs disappear and new ones appear that require vastly different responsibilities. Or it may involve integrating technology to create more personalized learning experiences.

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Sunday 27 December 2020

the impact of teachers on us

One of the highlights of BBC radio this year was the moment when former footballer Ian Wright talked about the influence of a teacher when he was very young:


Former England striker Ian Wright has tearfully paid tribute to a childhood teacher he remembers as "the greatest man in the world". The ex-footballer had a hard time keeping the emotion out of his voice as he told Desert Island Discs about being reunited with Sydney Pigden in 2010 (footage of their reunion later went viral). Mr Pigden passed away in 2017

Ian Wright tearfully remembers childhood teacher - YouTube

Here's the moment when they met many years later:


Ian Wright gets a big shock! - YouTube

Here are some more reflections:

The Impact of Teachers: A Story of Indelible Memories and Self-Esteem | LD Topics | LD OnLine

Why Are Teachers Important In Our Society? They Have Influence

The Influence of Teachers: Reflections on Teaching and Leadership: Merrow, John: 9780615431727: Amazon.com: Books

Understanding a Teacher’s Long-Term Impact | Edutopia

17 Ways Teachers Change Lives - TeamTom Education

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Saturday 26 December 2020

self-directed education

Education doesn't need schools:

Jay Doubleyou: deschooling society

As pointed out by the FEE think tank, covered on these pages:

Jay Doubleyou: education happens beyond the classroom

Jay Doubleyou: we are now entering the 'imagination age' >>> schooling was for the industrial era, unschooling is for the future

Here's another, recent piece from the FEE:

FEE’s Essential Guide to Self-Directed Education - Foundation for Economic Education

And here's another essential guide:

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What Is Self-Directed Education?

Education that derives from the self-chosen activities and life experiences of the person becoming educated.

Let’s start with the term education. In everyday language people tend to equate education with schooling, which leads one to think of education as something that is done to students by teachers. Teachers educate and students become educated. Teachers give an education and students receive this gift. But any real discussion of education requires us to think of it as something much broader than schooling.

Education can be defined broadly in a number of ways. A useful definition for our purposes is this: Education is the development and sum of everything a person learns that enables that person to live a satisfying and meaningful life. This includes the kinds of things that people everywhere more or less need to learn to fully inhabit their bodies and navigate a complex, changing world. ...

What Is Self-Directed Education? | Alliance for Self-Directed Education

With more from this group:

Alliance for Self-Directed Education | Home Page

And here:

Tuesday 22 December 2020

brexit: and fishing rights... and selling fish

We are nearing the end-game in the final Brexit talks - and fishing is the key issue:

EU vows 'final push' in UK trade talks but fish rift threatens deal | Reuters

Rifts over fishing narrow in EU-UK talks

The fishing community voted overwhelmingly to leave:

Futures Forum: Brexit: and Fishing for Leave

It's always been an emotional issue:

France remains tough: An emotional dispute over fish could burst a Brexit deal - Brexit explained - YouTube

Brexit: The UK and EU both need to put aside emotion and cut a deal

But it's not just a question of catching fish - but also selling them.

And the problem is that the British prefer steak to shellfish, and this has been known for some time - as reported back in August 2018:

The problem is complicated by the fact that much of what these men catch is exported back to Europe. From the 90 lobster pots and 300 whelk pots that Harvey has laboriously hauled to the surface that morning, some of the catch will get to London but the rest is either too expensive or out of step with local taste to find a British market.

“I don’t eat them,” admits his brother Chris as they pick over a bucket of whelks, which are said to taste of rubber if you don’t cook them right. With lobsters fetching a tenner each on the quayside and up to £50-£60 by the time they reach London restaurants, Chris says he prefers a steak if he wants to treat the family.

This makes walking away from the EU without a deal for ongoing access to its consumer markets another worry for what is left of the British industry.

Some would still like to see UK fishing cut loose regardless. A rebalancing of British consumer tastes away from imported white fish and toward shellfish and other locally-caught produce could yet see this cottage industry grow into an artisanal success story.

'We have been hijacked': fishermen feel used over Brexit | Politics | The Guardian

Futures Forum: Brexit: and fishing rights >>>> "When Britain first joined the EU, the wholesale sell-out was a British choice – not an EU dictat."

Futures Forum: Brexit: and exporting shellfish from Brixham

Most fish caught in British waters is sold to the EU - and this was pointed out back in 2016, soon after the referendum and years before the current 'last minute' talks on fish:

EU trade is 'key' to success of UK fish industry as 75% of home-caught fish is exported - and majority of fish eaten by Britons is imported

Britons will have to eat more home-caught mackerels and fewer imported prawns if the Government fails to agree a favourable trade deal for the fishing industry with the EU following Brexit.

A parliamentary report published today has found that some 75 per cent of fish caught in the UK is exported, mostly to the European Union, while the majority of fish eaten in the UK is imported.

For this reason, it argued that trade agreements with the EU ‘will be a key factor to the future success of the UK fishing industry and fish processors’.

EU trade 'key' to success of UK fish industry as 75% of home-caught fish is exported | This is Money

Brixham also exports most of its fish to the EU:

Brixham is England’s top fishing harbour by value of catch landed. The port has almost doubled the value of landings, from £22million three years ago to £40million in 2017 – mostly on the back of a booming cuttlefish fishery.

About 90% of the cuttlefish is exported to EU countries.

Mr Marsden is vice chair of the Devon and Severn Inshore Fisheries and Conservation Authority and a board member of the Marine Conservation Society.“What happens if we ‘fall off a cliff’ and don’t get a trade deal?” he said. “This market thrives as the moment because it’s able to move fast and transport the fish within hours from here to the end destination. If that can’t happen, it would be very serious for Brixham.”

But Jim Portus, chief executive of the South Western Fish Producers Organisation, said: “I believe we’ll end up with a deal with our European colleagues because they also want frictionless trade into the UK.

Brexit could leave fish rotting on the quayside - Devon Live

Brixham is England's most valuable fishing port - Devon Live

And all other UK shell-fish ports also need the EU markets - as with this piece from the weekend:

Shell shocked: 'Lobster capital' braces for Brexit - BBC News

Finally, deal or no deal, 'British' fishing communities won't win:

Brexit news: UK fishing rights will remain 'in hands of millionaires and multinationals' | UK | News | Express.co.uk

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Friday 18 December 2020

a critique of phonics

This blog has looked before at 'phonics' and the criticism coming from Stephen Krashen, Emeritus Professor of Linguistics and Education at the University of Southern California:

Whole Language

Krashen is a strong advocate of the whole language approach to the teaching of reading, and has written many articles in support of it. In essence, whole language proponents claim that children learn to read most enjoyably and efficiently by exposure to interesting stories that are made comprehensible to them through pictures and discussions. This is in contrast to structured decoding programmes (usually designated phonics) in which children learn to read by sounding out the various parts of words.


More on Whole Language

Whole language is the term for a conglomeration of holistic theories of learning, not only of reading. The principle is that proficiency is acquired by engaging in whatever is to be learned (complex though it may be), rather than separating out the component subskills for discrete practice before putting them together again.

The whole language approach became a major educational paradigm in the latter decades of the 20th century. In recent years, however, there has been something of a backlash (often called Back to Basics). Phonics has made a comeback, particularly in the US, where it has been facilitated by the policies enacted under the No Child Left Behind programme in 2002.

Comments

The whole language/phonics debate has become politicised and increasingly vitriolic. Constant media reports about falling literacy standards have alarmed parents, many of whom vehemently protest if they consider their child's school to have chosen the wrong approach. The issue is further complicated by the involvement of publishing houses which stand to make large profits if school districts can be persuaded to buy their comprehensive sets of phonics-based materials. Such an entanglement of interests is rarely conducive to making the best pedagogical decisions.


More comments on Whole language

Reading proficiency is in many ways the primary academic skill. Children who are poor readers usually struggle badly in school. It is no surprise, therefore that there has been such an enormous amount of research on the issue, and a similar amount of debate on the pedagogical implications of the findings. Teachers who would like to know a little more about the main issues are recommended to follow these links:


An introduction to the work of Stephen Krashen

Jay Doubleyou: krashen and second language learning

Krashen is certainly not alone in recognising the failings of this approach:

Phonics Doesn’t Help Reading Comprehension
Another common criticism of phonics instruction is that it does nothing to help reading comprehension, as this passage illustrates:
“A child filled full of phonics rules may be able to pronounce a word flawlessly without having any idea what it means, much less what its relation is to the words sitting next to it.” 2

Phonics Criticisms | TheReadingAdviceHub.com

With more here:

Reconsidering the Evidence That Systematic Phonics Is More Effective Than Alternative Methods of Reading Instruction | SpringerLink

Why Phonics Isn’t the Be-all and End-all of Learning to Read | Learning and Development | Teach Early Years

An Evidence-based Critique of Synthetic Phonics in Literacy Learning

The phonics versus whole language controversy | Language Debates

And a piece from Misty Adoniou from three years ago:

How the national phonics test is failing England and why it will fail Australia too | EduResearch Matters

She writes again in the EL Gazette in October - with some excellent points made.

Click on the link below for the full piece.

English language learners need the whole linguistic picture

Anglophone countries have been struggling for years with declining achievement in reading and writing as students move through primary school and into high school.

In 2019 more than 25 per cent of Year 6 students in England failed to reached the minimum requirements in the annual national reading and writing assessments. This means around 1 in 4 students in England are leaving primary school ill-equipped to cope with the literacy demands of high school. Similar statistics are reported in Australia and the United States.

The US has decided the problem is that students do not have the skills to comprehend complex texts. So, they have developed a more challenging curriculum (the Common Core Standards) to raise expectations of what students should be able to read and write.

England has decided the problem is that students do not have the skills to decode basic texts. So, in 2011 they instituted a mandatory Phonics Screening Check for Year 1 students. Students are prepared for the test through government-approved commercial, synthetic phonics programs. Those who fail the test receive more phonics instruction and re-take the test in Year 2. The rationale is, if we can get the basics right, the rest will follow. Eight years on, it is clear the rationale is flawed.

But why hasn’t this phonics ‘first, fast and furious’ approach worked? And are there lessons for those who teach English language learners?

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English language learners need the whole linguistic picture | E L Gazette

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Thursday 17 December 2020

private language schools: accreditation and protecting clients

A very good place to go to see what's happening to the world of teaching and learning English is the excellent EL Gazette:

EL Gazette | Magazine News | English Language Schools Students UK

It's latest story in on how the big boys of the English teaching world are not doing so well.

Click on the link below for the full story:

Is Covid breaking the chains?

The fact that Eurocentres has gone into a voluntary arrangement, not exactly a liquidation but a way of protecting creditors’ money while a company continues to trade should, perhaps, not come as a surprise.
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It is clear that Covid has caused particular havoc among middle-sized language school chains concentrated in one country...
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Accreditation UK, to use the official title of the scheme jointly owned by the British Council and English UK, has never included the financial situation of a school in the areas it inspects. Although the accreditation schemes in the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand all do. Many, including Ireland, also have schemes which protect clients’ money.
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Unless the UK stiffens up the financial controls on its language schools, students and agents who face losing their money may opt for countries where their deposits will be safer.
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Saturday 12 December 2020

new versions of traditional christmas carols

There are so many beautiful Christmas carols:

Jay Doubleyou: favourite christmas carols

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This is a beautiful arrangement of an old carol:

The Wexford Carol · Desmond Earley · Mark Waters · The Choral Scholars of University College Dublin · Irish Chamber Orchestra 

The Wexford Carol - YouTube

And there are other wonderful pieces in their new album:

Be All Merry | HIGHRESAUDIO

Be All Merry by Irish Chamber Orchestra & The Choral Scholars of University College Dublin on Amazon Music - Amazon.com

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And here is a group that has a very modern, but still very traditional feel to carols:

PTXofficial - YouTube

For example:

[OFFICIAL VIDEO] 12 Days of Christmas - Pentatonix - YouTube

[Official Video] Joy To The World – Pentatonix - YouTube

[OFFICIAL VIDEO] God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen - Pentatonix - YouTube

[OFFICIAL VIDEO] Deck The Halls - Pentatonix - YouTube

[OFFICIAL VIDEO] Away in a Manger – Pentatonix - YouTube

[Official Video] Carol of the Bells - Pentatonix - YouTube

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British composer Howard Goodall has done a lot on Christmas carols - with an interesting documentary:

BBC Two HD The Truth About Christmas Carols (2008) - YouTube

He's also arranged several carols very nicely:

Goodall: Enchanted Voices - Pro curatis (For Those That Are Cared For) - YouTube

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Here are some very interesting, older but 'modern' arrangements:

Queen City Brass Band - Coventry Carol - YouTube

Bing Crosby & David Bowie - "The Little Drummer Boy (Peace On Earth)" - YouTube

The Cherry Tree Carol - YouTube

Carlson School of Management Flash Mob, Deck the Halls - YouTube

Steeleye Span The Boar's head Carol - YouTube

God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen - The Petersens (LIVE) - YouTube

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Thursday 10 December 2020

will innovation or government save us?

Today’s big read in the Guardian looks at the difficult questions around new technologies and finite resources:    

The curse of ‘white oil’: electric vehicles’ dirty secret | News | The Guardian

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These news pages have looked at how potentially ‘dirty’ batteries are:

Cobalt in your car battery: the ethics of mining minerals – Vision Group for Sidmouth

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Even if the sources are relatively local:

West Country lithium – Vision Group for Sidmouth

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Earlier in the year, Michael Moore caused controversy with his latest documentary questioning ‘alternative technologies’:

This film is the wake-up call to the reality we are afraid to face: that in the midst of a human-caused extinction event, the environmental movement’s answer is to push for techno-fixes and band-aids. It’s too little, too late.”

‘Planet of the Humans’: a new documentary – Vision Group for Sidmouth

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We are facing a conundrum, then:

Do we tackle a growing environmental catastrophe with ‘techno-fixes’ or do we look to more fundamental changes?

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The Futures Forum blog has looked at these issues over the years:

On the one hand, the techno-fix:

Futures Forum: The techno-fix … Can we engineer our way out of environmental catastrophe? Or … Can we ‘design for the real world’?

[And with a comment posted only today here:] Futures Forum: Techno-promises unfulfilled >>> Where did the future go?

Futures Forum: Our core ecological problem is not climate change. It is overshoot, of which global warming is a symptom. And technology won’t save us.

Futures Forum: Climate change: Are proposals to repair the climate offering “scalable technological fixes” or “climate despair”?

On the other, fixing the system:

Futures Forum: Climate change… and the possibility – or not – of “decoupling” economic growth from environmental impacts

Futures Forum: Climate change… “Clean growth is a safe bet in the climate casino”

Futures Forum: Climate Change: and growth on Radio 4

Futures Forum: Climate change >>> This Changes Everything >>> 

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The real question, though, is whether free-market innovation or the government is going to provide the solutions:

Center for a Stateless Society » Reclaiming the Public

Conservatives don’t hate climate science. They hate the left’s climate solutions – The Washington Post

Futures Forum: Climate change: “Conservatives don’t hate climate science. They hate the left’s climate solutions”

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There are two new books for your Christmas stocking which address these questions.

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Firstly, there is the contention that free societies produce innovation – from Matt Ridley, aka Viscount Ridley, disrupter, former chair of Northern Rock, and a ‘master raconteur’:

Innovation, he argues, is not mere invention: to take off, an invention needs to become ‘sufficiently practical, affordable, reliable and ubiquitous to be worth using’.

Frances Cairncross – Secrets of the Wheelie Suitcase | Literary Review | Issue 487

Asks RIchard Dawkins:

Why should fiction be more gripping than books about what really happened? I don’t know, but Matt Ridley certainly bucks the trend. “How Innovation Works” (Fourth Estate) warms to the “bottom-up” theme of his earlier “The Evolution of Everything”, moving on to the history of human inventions. No, not inventions, evolutions. Forget the “lone genius” theory. The steam engine, television, the light bulb, even the water closet – innovation after innovation evolved many times independently around the world. Fascinating stories by a master raconteur.

Books of the year | newstatesman.com

With further enthusiasm for his analysis:

How Innovation Works by Matt Ridley review — forget lightbulb moments | Saturday Review | The Times [paywall]

How Innovation Works by Matt Ridley review: the real mother of invention? It’s not necessity | telegraph.co.uk [paywall]

Saying yes slowly is what’s hampering progress today | The Spectator

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On the other hand, another book fresh off the press pushes for the same sort of interventions we have seen over the current health crisis:

In “Corona, Climate, Chronic Emergency”, Andreas Malm begins by asking why capitalist governments have seemingly been willing to pitch the world into recession to fight Covid, while they have been so resistant to calls to cut carbon pollution sharply. After all, Malm muses, “no champion of radical emissions cuts has ever asked people to submit to something as unpleasant as a lockdown.”

Book Review: Corona, Climate, Chronic Emergency | Climate & Capitalism

This is by Swedish academic and activist Andreas Malm:

Andreas Malm | jacobinmag.com

Andreas Malm | The Department of Human Geography | keg.lu.se

And there have been several reviews of his latest work:

Malm mines the initial states of emergency imposed by governments in 2020 responding to Covid-19 for insights and lessons in contrast with the very different responses to the more serious climate emergency.

Capitalism can’t be curbed with carrots – Tempest

Global fever | theecologist.org 

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Wednesday 9 December 2020

hibernating language schools

It's been a difficult time for the teaching English industry:

Jay Doubleyou: how are english language teachers doing?

Jay Doubleyou: how is the english language teaching industry doing?


This is from an excellent piece about the state of schools - and how to find out for yourself:


Is hibernation the answer to a Covid Christmas?

Melanie Butler tries to sort out what’s going on with school closures.

To be fair to my fellow hacks, in the midst of a global pandemic where schools have been ordered to open and close their doors like cuckoo clocks, it’s astonishingly difficult to find out what is actually going on.

In the UK and Malta, for example, the only way you know that a school has closed is when they disappear from the accreditation lists. But even then they can suddenly appear again...

No wonder the Gazette is inundated with e-mails from agents demanding to know if a certain school is in trouble. (Answer: if it is in the UK, check for free at Companies House where all companies’ financial information is available. If it isn’t in the UK, we’re not going to pay to find out for you.) Also, see our updated list of UK school closures and changes to legal status...

Bring on hibernation. Show us all to the bear cave. We need some rest.

Is hibernation the answer to a Covid Christmas? | E L Gazette

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Thursday 3 December 2020

some rappers have a larger vocabulary than shakespeare or melville

"Designer Matt Daniels looked at the first 35,000 words of artists’ rap lyrics — and the first 35,000 words of Moby-Dick, along with 35,000 words from Shakespeare’s plays — to compare the size of their vocabularies. He found that some have bigger vocabularies than Shakespeare or Melville. Of course, vocabulary size isn’t the only measure of artistry. But it’s an interesting look at how English has changed."

25 maps that explain the English language - Vox


The Largest Vocabulary in Hip Hop

Largest vocabulary in hip hop uses more unique words than Shakespeare

Data scientists reveal the rappers that have a better vocabulary than Shakespeare | indy100 | indy100

The Best Infographic for Comparing Rapper Vocabularies, From Wu-Tang to Yeezy | WIRED

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