@BBCr4today, why would we want to hear from @Nigel_Farage, a gob with only 4 other MPs in his party, about whether we should align with the EU or US? Greens have 4 MPs, LibDems have 72 and there's even an Opposition party. Media representing Democracy? Have switched off
@RoryStewartUK Didn't know until today that Jesus' basic teaching "Love thy neighbour" (i.e. other people) was such niche knowledge.
Of course we love our own kids best; the teaching challenges people to hold others in the same regard. Nothing new there.
@krassenstein When you've got the President, the VP and a bunch of the top politicians in your cathedral and your brief is to preach so that the Christian message is made relevant to their lives, it's going to be political! I'd say the bishop did her job that day.
@JamesAFurey I agree (as an English teacher with a German degree) that English teachers should know how grammar works annd teach how it shapes meaning, but if the students don't know/remember something, you can just... teach it to them. Word classes are a quick fix.
Four years ago I wrote my inaugural poem The Hill We Climb. Both when I wrote it and performed it, I did so while continuously reflecting on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr and Coretta Scott King’s legacy. I was (and am) blown away by how my words reverberated around the world; if anything, it proved to me that we honor King’s dream, by daring to dream big, and by, most importantly, daring to dream together. Only then will the loving fantasies of our better nature transform into reality. The work and fight for the dream persists, and what’s more, it is not just a fight, but fate—that perhaps we are as destined for this time as it is destined for us. What a worthwhile, powerful calling only we can answer. Here with you in the hill and the climb, and whatever light lies beyond, whatever light lies within.
-Amanda
@ChloeELHarrison@EnglishAston@mmgiovanelli@meganmansworth@HassanAdj@Eng_MrWalker Thanks so much for this fab session! Having a banging Friday night with the readings you gave us and looking forward to sharing Text World Theory, Cognitive Grammar and reading and the emotions with the English team at Cirencester College next week.
@PeteOlusoga They'll be telling us next that Jesus was born in the Middle East next.
When all right thinking people know that Our Lord was born in Barnstaple.
@missjillyp @RetirementTales True. My mum worked full time as a social worker but took a few years out when my little brother was born, so l got to go home. No real parental leave in the early 1980s - not everything was better then.
@RetirementTales Sometimes l went home for lunch. Cheese sandwich and The Sullivans. One winter's morning l'd chosen to be "sandwiches". It snowed and the "home dinners" children were allowed to stay at home for the afternoon. Nearly forty years on, l'm still gutted at my choice that day!
For me there’s only one contender for Person of the Year.
Gisele Pelicot.
The woman who has recalibrated how we think about rape by refusing to feel shame.
“It’s time we change the way we look at rape”, she said outside the court today.
And…more than anyone I can think of… she’s done that.
“Shame must change sides”, she said, and perhaps – perhaps – that is a little more true today than it’s ever been.
But there’s something else that I want to talk about. Something that’s much more difficult to confront than the inspiration and dignity of Gisele Pelicot.
51 men.
51 men who are not all men… but who are also quite a lot of men. 51 of them in fact.
And if you read about them… their backgrounds… their jobs… their families or lack of family… they’re all quite different.
A firefighter…a nurse… an unemployed alcoholic.
Some were abused as children. Some had comfortable upbringings with kids of their own.
Six had domestic violence convictions. 45 didn’t.
One was 27. Another was 74.
There’s no pattern here. Nothing we can point to. Other than the fact there is no profile of a rapist. Which is perhaps the most frightening thing of all.
@CF_Farrow Taxing education is not new. Colleges have been subject to tax for some time, thus taking away money which could be spent on students, yet creates minimal controversy. Are some children more deserving than others?
@LoppyRae Awful. I managed 6 wks with 1st and 6ths with 2nd, prioritising it over everything. (Worth it? both chn are healthy.) It's the first thing we can do for our children, so it's devastating when it doesn't work. There are soooo many further meaningful ways to care for them.