Thursday, November 30, 2006

Openings

Blair, "education, education, education". That was his promise of almost 10 years ago to focus on improving schooling and training in the UK. Yet it has taken him this long to realise some fundamental points everyone has been pointing out for years, A-Levels are too easy. A large proportion of the A-Levels offered over here are totally pointless, LSE has been publishing a list of these for years and this year other top universities finally followed their example. (LSE's list of non preferred A-Levels.) More students doing the IB is a good thing, shock, horror! You mean creating more well-rounded students is a good thing?! Of course the major problem with education in this country is the general attitude to it. Teachers are given little or no respect and subjects like media studies are considered as important as physics. Blair's aim for 50% of 18 yr olds to go to university is blatantly ridiculous, if they're doing serious courses then fine but seriously, golf course management as a degree? Wouldn't it be more sensible to push alternate qualifications and on job training?

Is it just me who is beginning to feel as if we're living an old Cold War spy book? It was bad enough when the former KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko was poisoned with the radioactive isotope polonium-210. Now, Yegor Gaidar (the former Russian prime minister), also seems to have been poisoned. This has been linked with the death of investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya, who was shot in Moscow in October. I'm sorry; this is beginning to get absurd. Assuming for a moment that is the Russians, and more specifically Putin, what do they think they're playing at? I know that under Russian law the president and the government are entitled to pursue and attack extremists all over the world (incidentally the law to define extremism can be interpreted to mean anyone against the government). This was passed quietly by the Russians to avoid attention. What are they playing at? Russia should be conducting itself as one of the political and economic leaders of the world, as a member of the G8 it has quite an important role to play. They are meant to be a free democracy but instead you have alleged assassinations and a press that isn't quite free. Is this a country we should be following?

Speak to you soon,

The Young Contrarian