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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » ‘Peak Corbyn’ is a myth providing false reassurance to his opp

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    Rexel56Rexel56 Posts: 807

    Rexel56 said:

    I'm bored with this grammar school debate on both sides. It's clear the current system is failing 'bright but poor' children. Grammar schools in the past offered these children a lifeline which is now denied, and that impacts social mobility.

    We need do something to change that. Bringing back Grammar schools is probably not the best way, but we need to do something different.

    The bright kids need to be given an education commensurate with their abilities and, very importantly, not be in the same classroom as a bunch of scummy yobs who will disrupt the lesson and hold back the able. Not a separate school, just a separate classroom. Mixed ability classes has to be the most stupid idea in education ever proposed and, amazingly, far too often adopted.
    Classroom behaviour is a function of the quality of the school’s leadership, not the backgrounds of the kids who happen to be there.
    I agree that the right sort of leadership in the school can reduce the level of classroom disruption. But isn't it better to get the troublemakers out of the way, so that those who want to learn can learn, and the teacher can focus on teaching rather than classroom management?
    Absolutely, any effective approach to classroom discipline will involve the removal of disruptive kids.
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    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 30,919

    Anyone cross referenced support for Grammar Schools with marginals?

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/994859555967381504

    Oh look. The places where there are Grammar schools in existence are the places are generally the most in favour of them whilst the places that have not had the benefit of having Grammar schools and so are most ignorant about them are the most anti.
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    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 30,919
    MaxPB said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Morning PB traitors (without ermine) :D

    Riddle me this: Is all this grammar schools stuff in the papers this morning a diversion from the fact hthe government doesn't seem to have a ******* clue what they are going to do about Brexit? ;)

    Yes.
    Yep
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    Oh look. The places where there are Grammar schools in existence are the places are generally the most in favour of them whilst the places that have not had the benefit of having Grammar schools and so are most ignorant about them are the most anti.

    Like Immigration...
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    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    Grammar schools serve a useful purpose in stimulating the economy for tutoring and wine sales to stressed parents of 10 yr olds.

    The admissions system is totally distorted by parents who self or pay for excessive tutoring.

    Johnny Clever from the sink estate has no chance of beating dim but tutored Jemima from Acacia Avenue.

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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,390

    Mr. B, not paying attention to it, but wonder if first practice is of limited use in assessing pace.

    Probably so - but the huge margin is suggestive of Bottas at least having arrived at a very good setup for the tyres.
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    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,544

    Anyone cross referenced support for Grammar Schools with marginals?

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/994859555967381504

    Oh look. The places where there are Grammar schools in existence are the places are generally the most in favour of them whilst the places that have not had the benefit of having Grammar schools and so are most ignorant about them are the most anti.
    Or alternatively, Areas with Grammar schools want a greater proportion of their kids going to Grammar schools, and lesser chance of failing the 11 plus and being sent to a Sec Modern. Ideally 100% of their children would go.
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    brendan16brendan16 Posts: 2,315
    Scott_P said:

    Oh look. The places where there are Grammar schools in existence are the places are generally the most in favour of them whilst the places that have not had the benefit of having Grammar schools and so are most ignorant about them are the most anti.

    Like Immigration...
    That's an often quoted myth. A lot of the strongest UKIP voting areas had either experienced high migration or were populated by large numbers of people who had left urban areas to avoid it. Clacton for example is full of ex Eastenders.

    Their choice but presumably they just made similar choices to the remainer voting middle classes - and chose to live in less diverse areas. Clacton isn't Twickenham - it's probably more diverse though!
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,970
    Mr. B, indeed. He's also out-driven Hamilton so far this year. I think backing Bottas for the win each way may be worth a look (depending on odds, of course).

    Wish he were topping the driver's race, as he should be.
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    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,163
    Pulpstar said:

    BIt of a long range prediction here, but I think the Tories will hold steady more or less against Labour whilst shipping wards to the Lib Dems.
    The big cities where Labour is really romping home are excluded from this round.
    Certainly looks that way at the moment.
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,579
    Tomorrow's Guardian front page.....or not:

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/994866190177710080
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,299
    Pulpstar said:

    BIt of a long range prediction here, but I think the Tories will hold steady more or less against Labour whilst shipping wards to the Lib Dems.
    The big cities where Labour is really romping home are excluded from this round.
    The problems for the Tories are that these seats were last contested on the day the only time Tories have won a majority in the last 27 years.

    Lower turnout and 9 years into government usually means a high hiding for the governing party.

    And these elections will be held a few weeks after we've left the EU.

    A hard/WTO Brexit and it'll be like holding a round of locals a few days after Black Wednesday.
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    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 30,919
    Foxy said:

    Anyone cross referenced support for Grammar Schools with marginals?

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/994859555967381504

    Oh look. The places where there are Grammar schools in existence are the places are generally the most in favour of them whilst the places that have not had the benefit of having Grammar schools and so are most ignorant about them are the most anti.
    Or alternatively, Areas with Grammar schools want a greater proportion of their kids going to Grammar schools, and lesser chance of failing the 11 plus and being sent to a Sec Modern. Ideally 100% of their children would go.
    The number of grammar schools does not effect the pass rate for the 11+ which is set at a percentage of the relevant pupil population. What does happen is that some children who pass the 11+ still don't get to go to a Grammar because there are not enough places.
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    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 30,919
    TGOHF said:

    Grammar schools serve a useful purpose in stimulating the economy for tutoring and wine sales to stressed parents of 10 yr olds.

    The admissions system is totally distorted by parents who self or pay for excessive tutoring.

    Johnny Clever from the sink estate has no chance of beating dim but tutored Jemima from Acacia Avenue.

    Self tutoring your kids!!!!

    The horror! How dare parents take an interest in their children's education and help them to better themselves.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924
    TGOHF said:

    Grammar schools serve a useful purpose in stimulating the economy for tutoring and wine sales to stressed parents of 10 yr olds.

    The admissions system is totally distorted by parents who self or pay for excessive tutoring.

    Johnny Clever from the sink estate has no chance of beating dim but tutored Jemima from Acacia Avenue.

    There is definitely an element of that, but there are tests which are better at measuring raw potential than traditional 11 plus exams.
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    Rexel56Rexel56 Posts: 807
    It’s maybe not appreciated that Grammar Schools have already received a funding boost from this government as a result of the National Funding Formula fiasco, at least in North Yorkshire.

    Old funding arrangement, (numbers rounded):
    School with low % deprivation intake, e.g. suburban Grammar - £4,500 Funding per pupil
    School with high % deprivation intake, e.g. City comp - £5,000 fpp

    New funding arrangement rules:
    Minimum £4,800 per pupil
    Minimum 1.5% increase per pupil

    So, new funding levels:
    School with low % deprivation intake, e.g. suburban Grammar - £4,800 ffp being +6%
    School with high % deprivation intake, e.g. City comp - £5,075 ffp being +1.5%

    So Grammar Schools are getting four times the increase in funding. And that, folks, is how the rebellion by backbench Shire Tories was bought off.
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    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 30,919

    Rexel56 said:

    Rexel56 said:

    Can someone explain the problem that Grammar Schools are intended to solve?

    Middle Class parents want to avoid paying school fees for Tarquin and Jemima.
    That’s one view... any others?
    To improve social mobility by providing a route for the clever children of poor parents to receive a good education, achieve strong exam results, go to a Russel University and thence get a top job.
    How do you go about giving those children the private tuition ahead of sitting the 11-plus? Otherwise, there is no level playing field.
    In most areas that have Grammar schools most of the preparation is done in the feeder junior schools. It is the areas bordering Grammar school areas that have massive call on tutors. So Nottinghamshire where it abuts Lincolnshire has a huge number of private tutors. Far more than in Lincolnshire itself.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924

    TGOHF said:

    Grammar schools serve a useful purpose in stimulating the economy for tutoring and wine sales to stressed parents of 10 yr olds.

    The admissions system is totally distorted by parents who self or pay for excessive tutoring.

    Johnny Clever from the sink estate has no chance of beating dim but tutored Jemima from Acacia Avenue.

    Self tutoring your kids!!!!

    The horror! How dare parents take an interest in their children's education and help them to better themselves.
    There's a lot of evidence that children's academic achievement correlates with parents involvement in education more than anything else.

    If you don't care, then paying for your kids to go to The Hall in North London won't help. And if you do care, your kids will probably do fine at the local comprehensive.
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    david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 17,419
    Just seen Keiran's article. Very fair comment. We live in interesting times and precedent, though useful, is far from determinitive.
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    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,163
    Philip Collins: time to sack Boris.

    "A ruthless dispatch would illustrate a truth that too many people are slow to grasp, which is that Mrs May is stronger than she looks."

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/comment/may-not-only-can-but-should-sack-johnson-8mfh8qwvq
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    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,544
    rcs1000 said:

    TGOHF said:

    Grammar schools serve a useful purpose in stimulating the economy for tutoring and wine sales to stressed parents of 10 yr olds.

    The admissions system is totally distorted by parents who self or pay for excessive tutoring.

    Johnny Clever from the sink estate has no chance of beating dim but tutored Jemima from Acacia Avenue.

    There is definitely an element of that, but there are tests which are better at measuring raw potential than traditional 11 plus exams.
    For the bright but poor, the 11+ is failed before it is sat:

    https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/projects/time-think-differently/trends-broader-determinants-health-early-childhood-development
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    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633

    TGOHF said:

    Grammar schools serve a useful purpose in stimulating the economy for tutoring and wine sales to stressed parents of 10 yr olds.

    The admissions system is totally distorted by parents who self or pay for excessive tutoring.

    Johnny Clever from the sink estate has no chance of beating dim but tutored Jemima from Acacia Avenue.

    Self tutoring your kids!!!!

    The horror! How dare parents take an interest in their children's education and help them to better themselves.
    To be specific they are being tutored to pass an exam rather than a wider attainment level.

    There may be some side benefits but a lot of it is narrow exam passing material.
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    GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 20,845

    Anyone cross referenced support for Grammar Schools with marginals?

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/994859555967381504

    What’s interesting there is that people in the counties that *have* grammar schools seem to be strongly in favour.

    That’s a pretty good reason to keep them, even when the statistical evidence for them seems quite variable.

    I went to the local comp in a rough neighbourhood. I’m bound to say it never did me any harm, but I don’t think it’s true. I would have benefited hugely from being sent to a selective school.
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    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    rcs1000 said:

    TGOHF said:

    Grammar schools serve a useful purpose in stimulating the economy for tutoring and wine sales to stressed parents of 10 yr olds.

    The admissions system is totally distorted by parents who self or pay for excessive tutoring.

    Johnny Clever from the sink estate has no chance of beating dim but tutored Jemima from Acacia Avenue.

    There is definitely an element of that, but there are tests which are better at measuring raw potential than traditional 11 plus exams.
    But they aren't used.

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    Beverley_CBeverley_C Posts: 6,256
    Nigelb said:

    Is the policy of fifty years ago really relevant ?
    No
    Nigelb said:

    Rather a lot has changed since then.

    Thus Brexit and the hankering of people to live 50 years in the past ;)
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    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,581

    TGOHF said:

    Grammar schools serve a useful purpose in stimulating the economy for tutoring and wine sales to stressed parents of 10 yr olds.

    The admissions system is totally distorted by parents who self or pay for excessive tutoring.

    Johnny Clever from the sink estate has no chance of beating dim but tutored Jemima from Acacia Avenue.

    Self tutoring your kids!!!!

    The horror! How dare parents take an interest in their children's education and help them to better themselves.
    Of course good parents will do the best by their kids. The problem is how do you level the playing field for those children who had the misfortune to end up with feckless parents who couldn't give a toss?
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,029
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    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,928

    TGOHF said:

    Grammar schools serve a useful purpose in stimulating the economy for tutoring and wine sales to stressed parents of 10 yr olds.

    The admissions system is totally distorted by parents who self or pay for excessive tutoring.

    Johnny Clever from the sink estate has no chance of beating dim but tutored Jemima from Acacia Avenue.

    Self tutoring your kids!!!!

    The horror! How dare parents take an interest in their children's education and help them to better themselves.
    Self tutoring is not unknown on the sink estates, I understand. Uncles, aunts who aren’t on such estates maybe often do What doesn’t happen there is parents paying for tutoring. Basically because they can’t.

    Off topic, been having lots of problems accessing the site this morning! Ended up having to get a new password.
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    MikeSmithMikeSmith Posts: 4
    I'm puzzled as to how it can be said that Labour did slightly worse last week than in 2014 when they gained a further 77 council seats on top of the 330 plus gains they made then.
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,390

    Nigelb said:

    Is the policy of fifty years ago really relevant ?
    No
    Nigelb said:

    Rather a lot has changed since then.

    Thus Brexit and the hankering of people to live 50 years in the past ;)
    I wouldn't have included TSE among their number...
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    GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 20,845
    I knew it was my fault.
    What a twerp Lilico is. He should have his NZ passport rescinded.
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,226
    MikeSmith said:

    I'm puzzled as to how it can be said that Labour did slightly worse last week than in 2014 when they gained a further 77 council seats on top of the 330 plus gains they made then.

    The key metric is Labour v Tory; the fact rhat all parties had the additional opportunity to hoover up seats from smaller parties (principally ukip) doesn't change the fact that the opposition didn't lead the government in vote share.
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    SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,704
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    A vote for what and what though?

    Doesn't matter.

    Just like the Brexit vote, where nobody knows what they voted for, whichever side wins this vote will claim victory!!
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,390
    Rexel56 said:

    It’s maybe not appreciated that Grammar Schools have already received a funding boost from this government as a result of the National Funding Formula fiasco, at least in North Yorkshire.

    Old funding arrangement, (numbers rounded):
    School with low % deprivation intake, e.g. suburban Grammar - £4,500 Funding per pupil
    School with high % deprivation intake, e.g. City comp - £5,000 fpp

    New funding arrangement rules:
    Minimum £4,800 per pupil
    Minimum 1.5% increase per pupil

    So, new funding levels:
    School with low % deprivation intake, e.g. suburban Grammar - £4,800 ffp being +6%
    School with high % deprivation intake, e.g. City comp - £5,075 ffp being +1.5%

    So Grammar Schools are getting four times the increase in funding. And that, folks, is how the rebellion by backbench Shire Tories was bought off.

    Your calculations don't include pupil premium funding - which would of course be significantly greater in schools with 'high % deprivation' intake.
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    Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,292
    Nigelb said:

    Is the policy of fifty years ago really relevant ?
    Rather a lot has changed since then.
    Yes, because the current advocates of selection want to return to a golden age. However, the people actually living with its consequences at the time didn't regard it as so golden.
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,299
    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,299
    So if Liverpool sign Nabil Fekir from Lyon what do we think the headlines will be when he leaves Lyon for Liverpool and when he gets sent off playing for Liverpool?

    Fekir off?
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    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    On topic: peak X is a lazy metaphor (there is no reason why a political career should behave like the world's oil reserves), and anyway peak oil predictions do have a way of confounding the prophets. So:

    "... the peak of production will soon be passed, possibly within 3 years. ... There are many well-informed geologists and engineers who believe that the peak in the production of natural petroleum in this country will be reached by 1921 and who present impressive evidence that it may come even before 1920."
    - David White, chief geologist, United States Geological Survey (1919)

    “The average middle-aged man of today will live to see the virtual exhaustion of the world’s supply of oil from wells,”
    - Victor C. Anderson, president of the Colorado School of Mines (1921)

    Memo to Scott: these guys were experts.
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    Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 4,804
    Pulpstar said:

    BIt of a long range prediction here, but I think the Tories will hold steady more or less against Labour whilst shipping wards to the Lib Dems.
    The big cities where Labour is really romping home are excluded from this round.
    I think by the end of the LE 18 count, the city vs town narrative looked like something of an oversimplification. Round my way the Labour gains in Kirklees and Calderdale were hardly towny, but in industrial semi-rural chapelly wards and came both from LDs and Cons. Calderdale will almost certainly fall to Labour next year and Calder Valley looks a tricky Con GE defence from this distance. The councils themselves may be metropolitan, but a lot of WY is the best metropolitan comparator for a substantial number of Districts from Cumbria to Nottinghamshire.

    I'm not sure there are nearly enough Labour wards being defended in the southern towns or in extremely leavy areas to fully compensate.

    Con -400, LD +300, Lab +250, UKIP -150 (but back to retaining a number in double figures) for me.

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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,970
    The time of men is over.

    The Age of the Enormo-Haddock is at hand.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,903
    MikeSmith said:

    I'm puzzled as to how it can be said that Labour did slightly worse last week than in 2014 when they gained a further 77 council seats on top of the 330 plus gains they made then.

    A level result to 2014 would be better for Labour in London and slightly worse elsewhere compared to 2014.
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,390

    TGOHF said:

    Grammar schools serve a useful purpose in stimulating the economy for tutoring and wine sales to stressed parents of 10 yr olds.

    The admissions system is totally distorted by parents who self or pay for excessive tutoring.

    Johnny Clever from the sink estate has no chance of beating dim but tutored Jemima from Acacia Avenue.

    Self tutoring your kids!!!!

    The horror! How dare parents take an interest in their children's education and help them to better themselves.
    Of course good parents will do the best by their kids. The problem is how do you level the playing field for those children who had the misfortune to end up with feckless parents who couldn't give a toss?
    Improving primary school education would be a step towards that, but fundamentally there is no substitute for good early years parenting.
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    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,581

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    If D wins then presumably we get a fresh referendum on the revised deal. Then if D wins again, we just go round in circles AND NEVER LEAVE. So D = C in disguise.
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    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    The time of men is over.

    The Age of the Enormo-Haddock is at hand.

    And I for one welcome our new piscine overlords.
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,390

    Nigelb said:

    Is the policy of fifty years ago really relevant ?
    Rather a lot has changed since then.
    Yes, because the current advocates of selection want to return to a golden age. However, the people actually living with its consequences at the time didn't regard it as so golden.
    Do they ?
    Who outside of Kent is suggesting a return to what is a tarnished relic of the 'golden age' (i.e. the Kent system) ?
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    Rexel56Rexel56 Posts: 807
    Nigelb said:

    Rexel56 said:

    It’s maybe not appreciated that Grammar Schools have already received a funding boost from this government as a result of the National Funding Formula fiasco, at least in North Yorkshire.

    Old funding arrangement, (numbers rounded):
    School with low % deprivation intake, e.g. suburban Grammar - £4,500 Funding per pupil
    School with high % deprivation intake, e.g. City comp - £5,000 fpp

    New funding arrangement rules:
    Minimum £4,800 per pupil
    Minimum 1.5% increase per pupil

    So, new funding levels:
    School with low % deprivation intake, e.g. suburban Grammar - £4,800 ffp being +6%
    School with high % deprivation intake, e.g. City comp - £5,075 ffp being +1.5%

    So Grammar Schools are getting four times the increase in funding. And that, folks, is how the rebellion by backbench Shire Tories was bought off.

    Your calculations don't include pupil premium funding - which would of course be significantly greater in schools with 'high % deprivation' intake.
    Pupil premium funding is outside the scope of the National Funding Formula and doesn’t affect the calculations above.
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    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,077

    Anyone cross referenced support for Grammar Schools with marginals?

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/994859555967381504

    Newcastle the only part of the North East in favour. Interesting. Not sure why.
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    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,581
    Regarding next year's locals, in Leeds (and the other mets that did all-out due to boundary changes rather than thirds, I presume), the 3rd place winners are up for re-election next year. All else being equal, those from Labour should be secure as the risk of traffic light voting won't be there next year.

    The following year, the second placed winners have to stand again. Only the first placers get to serve a full 4-year term.
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    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,694
    The problem with grammar schools is that they condemn the majority of pupils to schools that by definition are second rate. They are anti-aspirational in an environment where everyone expects their children to be educated and the majority want them to go to university. Being told by people who got their life chances as a matter of course that THEIR kids don't deserve the same chances goes down badly with parents. The aspirational thing is to make high quality education available to all.

    Same with affordable housing. The Conservatives are on the wrong side of the aspiration issue, which is why they struggle with the thirty and forty somethings.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,957
    edited May 2018
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Rexel56 said:

    HYUFD said:

    Rexel56 said:

    Can someone explain the problem that Grammar Schools are intended to solve?

    The majority of our top professions are dominated by the privately educated?
    In which case, increasing Grammar School provision will have no effect... unless you’re suggesting that the sons and daughters of top professionals could go to Grammar School rather than private school and still follow in the parent’s footsteps...
    A bit of that certainly but a bright but poor child is more likely to get into a top profession and top university from a grammar school than any comprehensive school bar the most outstanding
    Except that poor but bright kids are far less likely to get into Grammar school in the first place.

    It is a primary school that Poor but bright kids fall behind the well off but dim, and the latter that get into Grammar school ahead of them. See the first graph in this report:


    https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/projects/time-think-differently/trends-broader-determinants-health-early-childhood-development
    Obviously poor but bright kids may have less chance of getting into grammars than rich and bright kids due to generally more parental support for the latter. If you are dim you will not pass the grammar school entrance test however rich your parents are.

    However poor but bright kids still get into grammars and once there have an excellent chance of going to Oxbridge or a top university or a top profession they would never have had in most comprehensives bar the most outstanding which tend to be in the most expensive catchment areas anyway and thus excluded to them
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    SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,704

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    what happens then if either C or D win, and the EU say, No, you trigged A50, you're leaving?
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    AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487
    Peak Corbyn is a nursery comfort blanket for the sycophantic, the hubristic and the credulous – those that STILL afford far to much credence to the minutiae of midterm polling, despite the raft of evidence to the contrary in recent times.
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    AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    what happens then if either C or D win, and the EU say, No, you trigged A50, you're leaving?
    Would never happen. The EU would consider our volte face the ultimate victory. And would welcome us back with open arms.
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    SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,704
    edited May 2018
    Anazina said:

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    what happens then if either C or D win, and the EU say, No, you trigged A50, you're leaving?
    Would never happen. The EU would consider our volte face the ultimate victory. And would welcome us back with open arms.
    I'll need a little more than 'it'll be fine, don't worry'.

    And under what terms. On the basis that things stay as they are now, or signing us up to every and all further integration?
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,957
    It was Wilson who started the process of shutting down grammars, Heath admittedly did not stop it, Thatcher slowed the process as PM, more pupils started going to grammars under Major and Caneron
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    AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487

    Anyone cross referenced support for Grammar Schools with marginals?

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/994859555967381504

    Newcastle the only part of the North East in favour. Interesting. Not sure why.

    This so-called 'polling' suffers from subsample hell.
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    rural_voterrural_voter Posts: 2,038

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    what happens then if either C or D win, and the EU say, No, you trigged A50, you're leaving?
    Apparently they can't. The bloke who wrote A50 should know

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-37852628
  • Options
    SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,704

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    what happens then if either C or D win, and the EU say, No, you trigged A50, you're leaving?
    Apparently they can't. The bloke who wrote A50 should know

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-37852628
    The Scottish cross-bench peer who wrote Article 50 - the procedure by which the UK would leave the EU - believed it was "not irrevocable"

    See that word 'believed'.....I do not think it means what you think it means...
  • Options
    David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506
    Today I have had to switch my browser from Internet Explorer to Mozilla FireFox in order to be able to read comments on PB.

    This has not happened for me before. Anyone else with the same problem?
  • Options
    AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487
    FF43 said:

    The problem with grammar schools is that they condemn the majority of pupils to schools that by definition are second rate. They are anti-aspirational in an environment where everyone expects their children to be educated and the majority want them to go to university. Being told by people who got their life chances as a matter of course that THEIR kids don't deserve the same chances goes down badly with parents. The aspirational thing is to make high quality education available to all.

    Same with affordable housing. The Conservatives are on the wrong side of the aspiration issue, which is why they struggle with the thirty and forty somethings.

    Indeed grammar schooling is the ultimate anti-aspirational format of schooling. Even private schooling is a better model. Witness the promising mathematician condemned at age 11 because his English is crap (at age 11) or the precocious computer programmer dumped into a secondary modern because she can't spell. No way out. Done and dusted in in the shit before puberty. Ugh.
  • Options
    surbysurby Posts: 1,227

    So if Liverpool sign Nabil Fekir from Lyon what do we think the headlines will be when he leaves Lyon for Liverpool and when he gets sent off playing for Liverpool?

    Fekir off?

    Is he really poor ?
  • Options
    Tissue_PriceTissue_Price Posts: 9,039

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    what happens then if either C or D win, and the EU say, No, you trigged A50, you're leaving?
    Apparently they can't. The bloke who wrote A50 should know

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-37852628
    That's not how law works. Judges would decide, not the original framer, who it seems did a pretty half-assed job.
  • Options
    MikeSmithMikeSmith Posts: 4
    Pulpstar said:

    MikeSmith said:

    I'm puzzled as to how it can be said that Labour did slightly worse last week than in 2014 when they gained a further 77 council seats on top of the 330 plus gains they made then.

    A level result to 2014 would be better for Labour in London and slightly worse elsewhere compared to 2014.
    I may not be the brightest of buttons but how can the 2014 results be better for Labour in London when 2018 was the best results for them in London since 1971? Also how can the results in the rest oc the country be slightly worse when they gained 17 seats on top of the ones they won in 2014? I just don't get it.
  • Options
    surbysurby Posts: 1,227
    IanB2 said:

    MikeSmith said:

    I'm puzzled as to how it can be said that Labour did slightly worse last week than in 2014 when they gained a further 77 council seats on top of the 330 plus gains they made then.

    The key metric is Labour v Tory; the fact rhat all parties had the additional opportunity to hoover up seats from smaller parties (principally ukip) doesn't change the fact that the opposition didn't lead the government in vote share.
    But Tories lost a 100 seats and Labour gained 77 seats. So Labour must have done better than 2014.
  • Options
    AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487

    Anazina said:

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    what happens then if either C or D win, and the EU say, No, you trigged A50, you're leaving?
    Would never happen. The EU would consider our volte face the ultimate victory. And would welcome us back with open arms.
    I'll need a little more than 'it'll be fine, don't worry'.

    And under what terms. On the basis that things stay as they are now, or signing us up to every and all further integration?
    Ideally so. Immediate transfer to the euro would be best.
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,903
    edited May 2018
    MikeSmith said:

    Pulpstar said:

    MikeSmith said:

    I'm puzzled as to how it can be said that Labour did slightly worse last week than in 2014 when they gained a further 77 council seats on top of the 330 plus gains they made then.

    A level result to 2014 would be better for Labour in London and slightly worse elsewhere compared to 2014.
    I may not be the brightest of buttons but how can the 2014 results be better for Labour in London when 2018 was the best results for them in London since 1971? Also how can the results in the rest oc the country be slightly worse when they gained 17 seats on top of the ones they won in 2014? I just don't get it.
    Well I've not analysed every vote in detail but I believe this is the case. I might do some analysis on it this weekend if I find the time..
  • Options
    surbysurby Posts: 1,227

    Scott_P said:
    Oh FFS. Farage in House of Commons for DUP? Is there no end to the madness...
    Will Banks buy a seat for Farage ? Why should a sitting MP resign ?
  • Options
    AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487
    TGOHF said:

    Grammar schools serve a useful purpose in stimulating the economy for tutoring and wine sales to stressed parents of 10 yr olds.

    The admissions system is totally distorted by parents who self or pay for excessive tutoring.

    Johnny Clever from the sink estate has no chance of beating dim but tutored Jemima from Acacia Avenue.

    Fair play – good post.
  • Options
    David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    Any second referendum must be restricted to the Leave options, otherwise it undermines the result of the first referendum and politicians promises to honour the result of the first referendum..
  • Options
    SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,704
    Anazina said:

    Anazina said:

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    what happens then if either C or D win, and the EU say, No, you trigged A50, you're leaving?
    Would never happen. The EU would consider our volte face the ultimate victory. And would welcome us back with open arms.
    I'll need a little more than 'it'll be fine, don't worry'.

    And under what terms. On the basis that things stay as they are now, or signing us up to every and all further integration?
    Ideally so. Immediate transfer to the euro would be best.
    Great, lets have that on the ballot, and we'll reject it. That;ll be the way to ensure we finally make our mind up to leave.

    We'll never ditch the £.
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,390
    Rexel56 said:

    Nigelb said:

    Rexel56 said:

    It’s maybe not appreciated that Grammar Schools have already received a funding boost from this government as a result of the National Funding Formula fiasco, at least in North Yorkshire.

    Old funding arrangement, (numbers rounded):
    School with low % deprivation intake, e.g. suburban Grammar - £4,500 Funding per pupil
    School with high % deprivation intake, e.g. City comp - £5,000 fpp

    New funding arrangement rules:
    Minimum £4,800 per pupil
    Minimum 1.5% increase per pupil

    So, new funding levels:
    School with low % deprivation intake, e.g. suburban Grammar - £4,800 ffp being +6%
    School with high % deprivation intake, e.g. City comp - £5,075 ffp being +1.5%

    So Grammar Schools are getting four times the increase in funding. And that, folks, is how the rebellion by backbench Shire Tories was bought off.

    Your calculations don't include pupil premium funding - which would of course be significantly greater in schools with 'high % deprivation' intake.
    Pupil premium funding is outside the scope of the National Funding Formula and doesn’t affect the calculations above.
    Sophistry, if you're talking about the social justice of education funding.
  • Options
    AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487
    Pulpstar said:

    MikeSmith said:

    Pulpstar said:

    MikeSmith said:

    I'm puzzled as to how it can be said that Labour did slightly worse last week than in 2014 when they gained a further 77 council seats on top of the 330 plus gains they made then.

    A level result to 2014 would be better for Labour in London and slightly worse elsewhere compared to 2014.
    I may not be the brightest of buttons but how can the 2014 results be better for Labour in London when 2018 was the best results for them in London since 1971? Also how can the results in the rest oc the country be slightly worse when they gained 17 seats on top of the ones they won in 2014? I just don't get it.
    Well I've not analysed every vote in detail but I believe this is the case. I might do some analysis on it this weekend if I find the time..
    I think what Mr Smithson is saying is that the collective analysis of the PB Tories and the wider commentariat is horse shit. He is just saying it in a more subtle and polite way than I am.
  • Options
    DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300
    edited May 2018
    HYUFD said:

    It was Wilson who started the process of shutting down grammars, Heath admittedly did not stop it, Thatcher slowed the process as PM, more pupils started going to grammars under Major and Caneron
    Let's not rewrite history. Mrs Thatcher was Ed Sec under Heath, in which capacity she shut more grammars than anyone else. That extract from the Conservative manifesto about closing grammars was likely written by her as Shadow Ed Sec. The problem of course was secondary moderns rather than grammars per se.
  • Options
    SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,704

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    Any second referendum must be restricted to the Leave options, otherwise it undermines the result of the first referendum and politicians promises to honour the result of the first referendum..
    So, you can argue voters didn't know what they signed up for when they voted to leave. You can certainly make the same arguement if you now ask them to sign up to vote for stay.

    What will the EU be in 10-20-30 years? Can we have a guarantee no future powers over our current relationship will be transferred away?
  • Options
    AnazinaAnazina Posts: 3,487

    Anazina said:

    Anazina said:

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    what happens then if either C or D win, and the EU say, No, you trigged A50, you're leaving?
    Would never happen. The EU would consider our volte face the ultimate victory. And would welcome us back with open arms.
    I'll need a little more than 'it'll be fine, don't worry'.

    And under what terms. On the basis that things stay as they are now, or signing us up to every and all further integration?
    Ideally so. Immediate transfer to the euro would be best.
    Great, lets have that on the ballot, and we'll reject it. That;ll be the way to ensure we finally make our mind up to leave.

    We'll never ditch the £.
    I agree that inside the EU but outside the Euro would probably command a clear plurality of the options Mr Screaming Eagle lays out. Which would be a decent outcome for all.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,957
    Anazina said:

    FF43 said:

    The problem with grammar schools is that they condemn the majority of pupils to schools that by definition are second rate. They are anti-aspirational in an environment where everyone expects their children to be educated and the majority want them to go to university. Being told by people who got their life chances as a matter of course that THEIR kids don't deserve the same chances goes down badly with parents. The aspirational thing is to make high quality education available to all.

    Same with affordable housing. The Conservatives are on the wrong side of the aspiration issue, which is why they struggle with the thirty and forty somethings.

    Indeed grammar schooling is the ultimate anti-aspirational format of schooling. Even private schooling is a better model. Witness the promising mathematician condemned at age 11 because his English is crap (at age 11) or the precocious computer programmer dumped into a secondary modern because she can't spell. No way out. Done and dusted in in the shit before puberty. Ugh.
    Rubbish. Grammar school pupils are represented in far bigger numbers as a percentage at Oxbridge and the top professions, law and medicine etc than those from comprehensives
  • Options
    StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092
    surby said:

    IanB2 said:

    MikeSmith said:

    I'm puzzled as to how it can be said that Labour did slightly worse last week than in 2014 when they gained a further 77 council seats on top of the 330 plus gains they made then.

    The key metric is Labour v Tory; the fact rhat all parties had the additional opportunity to hoover up seats from smaller parties (principally ukip) doesn't change the fact that the opposition didn't lead the government in vote share.
    But Tories lost a 100 seats and Labour gained 77 seats. So Labour must have done better than 2014.
    Yes, I was confused by this too.

    I'm not all convinced by the idea that opposition parties have to smash in midterm locals, and in particular have to significantly outperform last time when they were *also in opposition and polling really well*, in order to stand a chance in the next generals. It reminds me a lot of "always take the Tories' best poll and Labour's worst". Has anyone actually done any statistical analysis that shows we should be placing much significance on the locals?
  • Options
    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    Anazina said:

    Peak Corbyn is a nursery comfort blanket for the sycophantic, the hubristic and the credulous – those that STILL afford far to much credence to the minutiae of midterm polling, despite the raft of evidence to the contrary in recent times.

    But his personal poll rating for "best PM " has dropped substantially - that must be a concern ?
  • Options
    Carolus_RexCarolus_Rex Posts: 1,414

    Today I have had to switch my browser from Internet Explorer to Mozilla FireFox in order to be able to read comments on PB.

    This has not happened for me before. Anyone else with the same problem?

    Yep. Same here. Switched from IE to Chrome and it works fine.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,957

    HYUFD said:

    It was Wilson who started the process of shutting down grammars, Heath admittedly did not stop it, Thatcher slowed the process as PM, more pupils started going to grammars under Major and Caneron
    Let's not rewrite history. Mrs Thatcher was Ed Sec under Heath, in which capacity she shut more grammars than anyone else. That extract from the Conservative manifesto about closing grammars was likely written by her as Shadow Ed Sec. The problem of course was secondary moderns rather than grammars per se.
    Thatcher did not start the process of closing any grammars she just as Education Secretary did not oppose mainly Labour councils who closed them as was the Heath government policy
  • Options
    StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092
    HYUFD said:

    Anazina said:

    FF43 said:

    The problem with grammar schools is that they condemn the majority of pupils to schools that by definition are second rate. They are anti-aspirational in an environment where everyone expects their children to be educated and the majority want them to go to university. Being told by people who got their life chances as a matter of course that THEIR kids don't deserve the same chances goes down badly with parents. The aspirational thing is to make high quality education available to all.

    Same with affordable housing. The Conservatives are on the wrong side of the aspiration issue, which is why they struggle with the thirty and forty somethings.

    Indeed grammar schooling is the ultimate anti-aspirational format of schooling. Even private schooling is a better model. Witness the promising mathematician condemned at age 11 because his English is crap (at age 11) or the precocious computer programmer dumped into a secondary modern because she can't spell. No way out. Done and dusted in in the shit before puberty. Ugh.
    Rubbish. Grammar school pupils are represented in far bigger numbers as a percentage at Oxbridge and the top professions, law and medicine etc than those from comprehensives
    How does that contradict the comment you were responding to?
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,957
    FF43 said:

    The problem with grammar schools is that they condemn the majority of pupils to schools that by definition are second rate. They are anti-aspirational in an environment where everyone expects their children to be educated and the majority want them to go to university. Being told by people who got their life chances as a matter of course that THEIR kids don't deserve the same chances goes down badly with parents. The aspirational thing is to make high quality education available to all.

    Same with affordable housing. The Conservatives are on the wrong side of the aspiration issue, which is why they struggle with the thirty and forty somethings.

    The biggest opponents of building more affordable homes are NIMBY LDs not Tories
  • Options
    Tissue_PriceTissue_Price Posts: 9,039
    edited May 2018
    MikeSmith said:

    Pulpstar said:

    MikeSmith said:

    I'm puzzled as to how it can be said that Labour did slightly worse last week than in 2014 when they gained a further 77 council seats on top of the 330 plus gains they made then.

    A level result to 2014 would be better for Labour in London and slightly worse elsewhere compared to 2014.
    I may not be the brightest of buttons but how can the 2014 results be better for Labour in London when 2018 was the best results for them in London since 1971? Also how can the results in the rest oc the country be slightly worse when they gained 17 seats on top of the ones they won in 2014? I just don't get it.
    Broadly there are two factors delivering that - firstly the UKIP collapse effect, which I think is fairly obvious - everyone got to pick at a few bones (except the Lab leader of Derby council!)

    Secondly there is the differential Brexit effect. Because the seats up were disproportionately Remain the headline numbers were better for Labour, but the nationally-adjusted results compensate for that. To be fair, it's more the Conservatives outperforming here than Labour doing that badly, but it's the differential that matters.

    image

    https://whatukthinks.org/eu/how-brexit-shaped-the-local-election-vote/
  • Options
    Rexel56Rexel56 Posts: 807
    Nigelb said:

    Rexel56 said:

    Nigelb said:

    Rexel56 said:

    It’s maybe not appreciated that Grammar Schools have already received a funding boost from this government as a result of the National Funding Formula fiasco, at least in North Yorkshire.

    Old funding arrangement, (numbers rounded):
    School with low % deprivation intake, e.g. suburban Grammar - £4,500 Funding per pupil
    School with high % deprivation intake, e.g. City comp - £5,000 fpp

    New funding arrangement rules:
    Minimum £4,800 per pupil
    Minimum 1.5% increase per pupil

    So, new funding levels:
    School with low % deprivation intake, e.g. suburban Grammar - £4,800 ffp being +6%
    School with high % deprivation intake, e.g. City comp - £5,075 ffp being +1.5%

    So Grammar Schools are getting four times the increase in funding. And that, folks, is how the rebellion by backbench Shire Tories was bought off.

    Your calculations don't include pupil premium funding - which would of course be significantly greater in schools with 'high % deprivation' intake.
    Pupil premium funding is outside the scope of the National Funding Formula and doesn’t affect the calculations above.
    Sophistry, if you're talking about the social justice of education funding.
    If one adds Pupil Premium funding, which remains flat, to the calculations, the uplift to Grammar Schools funding has been even higher in comparison to the local comprehensive.

    Therefore, the point stands that the recent National Funding Formula has delivered a higher increase to Grammar Schools funding than to non-selective Schools in North Yorkshire.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,957

    Pulpstar said:

    BIt of a long range prediction here, but I think the Tories will hold steady more or less against Labour whilst shipping wards to the Lib Dems.
    The big cities where Labour is really romping home are excluded from this round.
    The problems for the Tories are that these seats were last contested on the day the only time Tories have won a majority in the last 27 years.

    Lower turnout and 9 years into government usually means a high hiding for the governing party.

    And these elections will be held a few weeks after we've left the EU.

    A hard/WTO Brexit and it'll be like holding a round of locals a few days after Black Wednesday.
    Not quite the Armageddon in London you were predicting though was it and hard Brexit is what many if not most Leave voters want
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,957
    edited May 2018
    TGOHF said:

    Grammar schools serve a useful purpose in stimulating the economy for tutoring and wine sales to stressed parents of 10 yr olds.

    The admissions system is totally distorted by parents who self or pay for excessive tutoring.

    Johnny Clever from the sink estate has no chance of beating dim but tutored Jemima from Acacia Avenue.

    That is not true.

    The 11+ is effectively an iq test, if you are dim you will not pass it however rich your parents are and how much you are tutored
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,299
    HYUFD said:

    Pulpstar said:

    BIt of a long range prediction here, but I think the Tories will hold steady more or less against Labour whilst shipping wards to the Lib Dems.
    The big cities where Labour is really romping home are excluded from this round.
    The problems for the Tories are that these seats were last contested on the day the only time Tories have won a majority in the last 27 years.

    Lower turnout and 9 years into government usually means a high hiding for the governing party.

    And these elections will be held a few weeks after we've left the EU.

    A hard/WTO Brexit and it'll be like holding a round of locals a few days after Black Wednesday.
    Not quite the Armageddon in London you were predicting though was it and hard Brexit is what many if not most Leave voters want
    My prediction was for the Tories to make net gains outside of London and net losses in London.

    I was right, 'twas ever thus
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,581
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It was Wilson who started the process of shutting down grammars, Heath admittedly did not stop it, Thatcher slowed the process as PM, more pupils started going to grammars under Major and Caneron
    Let's not rewrite history. Mrs Thatcher was Ed Sec under Heath, in which capacity she shut more grammars than anyone else. That extract from the Conservative manifesto about closing grammars was likely written by her as Shadow Ed Sec. The problem of course was secondary moderns rather than grammars per se.
    Thatcher did not start the process of closing any grammars she just as Education Secretary did not oppose mainly Labour councils who closed them as was the Heath government policy
    Are you suggesting that Thatcher opposed the education policy she implemented as Education Sec?
  • Options
    nunuonenunuone Posts: 1,138
  • Options
    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,793

    Today I have had to switch my browser from Internet Explorer to Mozilla FireFox in order to be able to read comments on PB.

    This has not happened for me before. Anyone else with the same problem?

    I use Chrome but Internet Explorer is pretty much finished anyway (is being phased out by MS in favour of Edge) so it makes sense to start transitioning to a new (and much, much better) browser soon.
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,903

    MikeSmith said:

    Pulpstar said:

    MikeSmith said:

    I'm puzzled as to how it can be said that Labour did slightly worse last week than in 2014 when they gained a further 77 council seats on top of the 330 plus gains they made then.

    A level result to 2014 would be better for Labour in London and slightly worse elsewhere compared to 2014.
    I may not be the brightest of buttons but how can the 2014 results be better for Labour in London when 2018 was the best results for them in London since 1971? Also how can the results in the rest oc the country be slightly worse when they gained 17 seats on top of the ones they won in 2014? I just don't get it.
    Broadly there are two factors delivering that - firstly the UKIP collapse effect, which I think is fairly obvious - everyone got to pick at a few bones (except the Lab leader of Derby council!)

    Secondly there is the differential Brexit effect. Because the seats up were disproportionately Remain the headline numbers were better for Labour, but the nationally-adjusted results compensate for that. To be fair, it's more the Conservatives outperforming here than Labour doing that badly, but it's the differential that matters.

    image

    https://whatukthinks.org/eu/how-brexit-shaped-the-local-election-vote/
    Yes yes that is what I was trying to say.
  • Options
    logical_songlogical_song Posts: 9,703

    Multi-choice referendum

    a) Accept the deal and Leave

    b) Reject the deal and Leave

    c) Reject the deal and Remain in the EU

    d) Ask the government to delay Brexit and get a better deal

    Conducted under AV
    Any second referendum must be restricted to the Leave options, otherwise it undermines the result of the first referendum and politicians promises to honour the result of the first referendum..
    That'd be the advisory referendum?
    Which we have to accept even if we no longer want to?
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,957
    edited May 2018

    HYUFD said:

    Pulpstar said:

    BIt of a long range prediction here, but I think the Tories will hold steady more or less against Labour whilst shipping wards to the Lib Dems.
    The big cities where Labour is really romping home are excluded from this round.
    The problems for the Tories are that these seats were last contested on the day the only time Tories have won a majority in the last 27 years.

    Lower turnout and 9 years into government usually means a high hiding for the governing party.

    And these elections will be held a few weeks after we've left the EU.

    A hard/WTO Brexit and it'll be like holding a round of locals a few days after Black Wednesday.
    Not quite the Armageddon in London you were predicting though was it and hard Brexit is what many if not most Leave voters want
    My prediction was for the Tories to make net gains outside of London and net losses in London.

    I was right, 'twas ever thus
    The Tories held all their councils in London Labour were targeting though and no London councils are up next year
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,957

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    It was Wilson who started the process of shutting down grammars, Heath admittedly did not stop it, Thatcher slowed the process as PM, more pupils started going to grammars under Major and Caneron
    Let's not rewrite history. Mrs Thatcher was Ed Sec under Heath, in which capacity she shut more grammars than anyone else. That extract from the Conservative manifesto about closing grammars was likely written by her as Shadow Ed Sec. The problem of course was secondary moderns rather than grammars per se.
    Thatcher did not start the process of closing any grammars she just as Education Secretary did not oppose mainly Labour councils who closed them as was the Heath government policy
    Are you suggesting that Thatcher opposed the education policy she implemented as Education Sec?
    She had to do as Heath told her, as I said since she became PM in 1979 we now have more pupils in grammar schools than then
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,957

    HYUFD said:

    Anazina said:

    FF43 said:

    The problem with grammar schools is that they condemn the majority of pupils to schools that by definition are second rate. They are anti-aspirational in an environment where everyone expects their children to be educated and the majority want them to go to university. Being told by people who got their life chances as a matter of course that THEIR kids don't deserve the same chances goes down badly with parents. The aspirational thing is to make high quality education available to all.

    Same with affordable housing. The Conservatives are on the wrong side of the aspiration issue, which is why they struggle with the thirty and forty somethings.

    Indeed grammar schooling is the ultimate anti-aspirational format of schooling. Even private schooling is a better model. Witness the promising mathematician condemned at age 11 because his English is crap (at age 11) or the precocious computer programmer dumped into a secondary modern because she can't spell. No way out. Done and dusted in in the shit before puberty. Ugh.
    Rubbish. Grammar school pupils are represented in far bigger numbers as a percentage at Oxbridge and the top professions, law and medicine etc than those from comprehensives
    How does that contradict the comment you were responding to?
    As it refutes the idea grammars are anti aspriational
  • Options
    StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092
    Pulpstar said:

    MikeSmith said:

    Pulpstar said:

    MikeSmith said:

    I'm puzzled as to how it can be said that Labour did slightly worse last week than in 2014 when they gained a further 77 council seats on top of the 330 plus gains they made then.

    A level result to 2014 would be better for Labour in London and slightly worse elsewhere compared to 2014.
    I may not be the brightest of buttons but how can the 2014 results be better for Labour in London when 2018 was the best results for them in London since 1971? Also how can the results in the rest oc the country be slightly worse when they gained 17 seats on top of the ones they won in 2014? I just don't get it.
    Broadly there are two factors delivering that - firstly the UKIP collapse effect, which I think is fairly obvious - everyone got to pick at a few bones (except the Lab leader of Derby council!)

    Secondly there is the differential Brexit effect. Because the seats up were disproportionately Remain the headline numbers were better for Labour, but the nationally-adjusted results compensate for that. To be fair, it's more the Conservatives outperforming here than Labour doing that badly, but it's the differential that matters.

    image

    https://whatukthinks.org/eu/how-brexit-shaped-the-local-election-vote/
    Yes yes that is what I was trying to say.
    Actually, yes, it looks like that's reflected in the PNV. 35%-35% in 2018, 31%-29% in 2014.
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