With more ructions
over who should provide schools, how, for whom and on what financial basis
involving organisations from the wilder shores of speculation and lending it is
time to review a post from October 2010 when the world was young and the
Coalition had not yet proved its serial incompetence.
It seems that my
rambling post may not have been quite as insane as it first appeared.
Quote:
Education has not been
the same since the decline and fall of the Ink Monitors. At one time in an Elementary School (5-14
then leave school) each class might have one.
Mostly “he’s”, they would be a trusted pupil and if they proved
reliable, polite and diligent they might earn a reference to be a shop
assistant or even a clerk.
They learned to check
the inkpot at each desk, judge the quantity necessary and pour in the right
amount of ink from a jar. To do this
they would have to be entrusted with access to the classroom cupboard and would
both obtain and return the jar properly and without supervision.
This was integral to a
whole culture of steel pen nibs and scarce paper when writing was a form of
calligraphy and care needed in the shaping of each letter, the accuracy long
since lost.
But think of what
might have happened in our modern age had ink still been in use. It is certain that persons of 15-17 or any
younger age could never be allowed to undertake such onerous duties.
Nor could teachers or
cleaning staff, it would be outside their conditions of service. There would have to be Writing Materials
Replenishment Assistants with negotiated salaries and comparable conditions of
service.
This would take
management and to avoid the post code lottery of differences a staff at local
authority level to co-ordinate, manage and supply the needed staff and materials. Clearly high level consultancy would need to
be brought in to satisfy the auditors and others that it was all to be done as
it should be.
But could local
authorities actually be entirely trusted with matters of this kind? It would cry out for central direction and
thinking. Possibly, it would begin as
part of one government department or another.
Then in recent years
an Ink Procurement and Inspection Agency would have been established with fully
staffed at salary levels to compete with senior management in the financial
sector to ensure that all the angles were covered, the targets set and
statistics and supervision ensured.
There would be
research budgets. A new department would
be funded at the University
of East Dunwich or
somewhere to ensure only inks of the highest quality, specifications and safety
standards were in use and to develop new inks.
The standardisation of
ink procurement would mean major contracts with all that this entailed. No doubt agreements would be reached in some
foreign place for out sourcing all the production for transport by container
ships. This would help the UK carbon
footprint and rid the nation of all the nasty inky manufacturing pollutants.
By some miracle of
accounting and with all the consultancy, financing and layers of management and
control the filling of inkpots would become critical to keeping up the GDP and
stimulation of the velocity of circulation of public sector funding.
The big question is
given the need to increase the consumption of ink during a time of economic
difficulty whether the use of ink pellets (wodges of paper dripping with ink
used as a missile fired by the skilled use of rubber bands) by alienated
victims of oppression in the classroom should be subject to reduced or no
regulation.
I keep rubber bands in
my desk and can still hit a moving target at fifteen paces. Will my time come again to cop the teacher or
the Ink Monitor one behind the ear?
Unquote.
Perhaps I should come
up with a scheme for a New Elementary School, with classes of sixty minded by
an unqualified teacher with no higher education supported by Pupil Teachers, 12-15
year olds, doing the real work and with senior pupils, monitors, on other
duties.
It would certainly be
cheaper and therefore enable more return on investment to the Hedge Fund or
Limited Liability Partnership who put up the money.
More to the point it
would almost certainly raise educational standards.
Who would call the register ( daily), clean the blackboard and distribute the books.
ReplyDeleteAll commonplace once but very technical.