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BillyStubbsTears wrote:QuoteActually, VJ, I'd say the opposite in terms of what today's exams are like compared to previous years.Previously, formal exam at University level (at least in my subject of engineering) used to be set piece events that set PROBLEMS for students. That was the only chance that assessors had of appraising how good students were at solving problems.And that was fcuking stupid. You ended up with a situation whereby the student who couldn;t see the clever trick required to work their way into the problem got zero, even if they actually knew a damn lot about the subject.In the real world, you don't solve problems without access to other sources of knowledge. You don't have to remember everything rote fashion. You have books. You have colleagues. Nowadays, you have the internet. All sources of knowledge that might be good, bad or indifferent in quality, but which DO exist. So why assess someone in a scenario that totally isolates them from those sources?These days, the information-gathering, problem-solving assessment is done via coursework. That is much more realistic. It gives students who are good at figuring things out given time and resources a chance. Those are the ones that we need to nurture as a country. Not nerds who can regurgitate a list of all the Kings and Queens of England since Nogbad the Bad. But coursework can be abused. So you also have a balance of hard, fact based exams. Which, if well prepared, give the poorer students a chance to show that they have a smattering of knowledge, the average student a chance to show that they can apply that knowledge to simple problems, and the very best student a chance to show that they understand the context and the limitations of the knowledge they have.I find the \"It were better when I were a bairn\" argument laughable.Health is better these days than it was 50 years ago.Cars are betterTrains are betterComputers are betterHouses are betterFood is betterTellies are betterFootballers are betterAthletes are fasterWhy should education be different? Why should students be thicker and exams easier?One reason. Because it makes inadequate old gets feel better about themselves.Fair enough. As I said, all of my serious exams that lead to qualifications have taken and are taking place around about the present day, so I'm not really in a position to comment on what exams were like in the past.I'd have imagined they were much more hard line sort of \"You must memorise the periodic table and then draw it out again from scratch\" type of exams, clearly I was wrong to assume that. I'm doing my second year of A levels at the minute, and 3 out of my 4 subjects require a certain level of \"not just knowing stuff but showing that you know what you're on about\" for the exam. Which involves writing out long written answers, giving both sides of an argument and then arguing the stronger side, so you can see where my point about exams evolving came from. I wouldn't say that is easier than memorising the Periodic table, or reeling off every King and Queen of England since the year dot, but, as you said, it certainly relates more to what you will encounter in your daily life than simply reeling off facts with no meaning behind them.
Actually, VJ, I'd say the opposite in terms of what today's exams are like compared to previous years.Previously, formal exam at University level (at least in my subject of engineering) used to be set piece events that set PROBLEMS for students. That was the only chance that assessors had of appraising how good students were at solving problems.And that was fcuking stupid. You ended up with a situation whereby the student who couldn;t see the clever trick required to work their way into the problem got zero, even if they actually knew a damn lot about the subject.In the real world, you don't solve problems without access to other sources of knowledge. You don't have to remember everything rote fashion. You have books. You have colleagues. Nowadays, you have the internet. All sources of knowledge that might be good, bad or indifferent in quality, but which DO exist. So why assess someone in a scenario that totally isolates them from those sources?These days, the information-gathering, problem-solving assessment is done via coursework. That is much more realistic. It gives students who are good at figuring things out given time and resources a chance. Those are the ones that we need to nurture as a country. Not nerds who can regurgitate a list of all the Kings and Queens of England since Nogbad the Bad. But coursework can be abused. So you also have a balance of hard, fact based exams. Which, if well prepared, give the poorer students a chance to show that they have a smattering of knowledge, the average student a chance to show that they can apply that knowledge to simple problems, and the very best student a chance to show that they understand the context and the limitations of the knowledge they have.I find the \"It were better when I were a bairn\" argument laughable.Health is better these days than it was 50 years ago.Cars are betterTrains are betterComputers are betterHouses are betterFood is betterTellies are betterFootballers are betterAthletes are fasterWhy should education be different? Why should students be thicker and exams easier?One reason. Because it makes inadequate old gets feel better about themselves.
Savvy there you go again, that 'anti-trade union legilation' as you put it was to stop 'wildcat' strikes and ffs there were plenty of them.What you really meant to say I think is that it was 'anti we can do what we like , when we like' legislation.Please can you explain to me what exact 'democratic rights' were taken from the Unions, were they the one's whereby they used force to disrupt this country at a drop of a hat perhaps ?The people of this country have the right to elect folk to run this country, not an individual union to disrupt it for their own ends.
MrFrost wrote:QuoteWhat are they playing at? I mean seriously?Just heard a Radio interview with one of them who thought it was Thatcher who introduced tuition fees. Clearly half of them are just jumping on the \"hate the coalition bandwagon\".I wonder why there were no riots when Labour first introduced the fee's, despite stating in their manifesto that they wouldn't.Labour however, can do no wrong, and we all know that.As I recall there was protests at the introduction of fees and the general consensus has been from introduction that yes students should make a contribution towards their higher education. The point of these protests is that they are attempting to put a university education beyond the reach of the ordinary working class lad/lass who has studied hard to meet the requirements for their particular course of study! My own opinion is that this is fundamentally wrong, and the chance of a university education should be available for all who wish to take it up! Having met the course entrance requirements of course!If you yourself had taken the opportunity, perhaps some of these little \"unlucky Alf\" moments might not have come your way eh?
What are they playing at? I mean seriously?Just heard a Radio interview with one of them who thought it was Thatcher who introduced tuition fees. Clearly half of them are just jumping on the \"hate the coalition bandwagon\".I wonder why there were no riots when Labour first introduced the fee's, despite stating in their manifesto that they wouldn't.Labour however, can do no wrong, and we all know that.
hoolahoop wrote:QuoteBillyStubbsTears wrote:Quotehoolahoop wrote:Quote Exams have become far easier than they used to be.Ahh, THAT Old Git classic.Evidence Hoola?Do you disagree before we wade on ? It is difficult to assess exactly why it's easier but I would think that the internet assisting with course work would help for starters.Continual assessment imo is easier than 'one off' exams.I must admit evidence is hard to come by only a gut feeling.Having worked as a University academic, and having seen, over a ten year period, a HUGE increase in the quality of students coming in, then yes, I would absolutely disagree. I have controlled experiment data here. I set the same exam paper every single year for 10 years - a paper that the students were not allowed to take out of the exam hall, so they couldn't pass it on to future years. The average marks went up from mid 50s to mid 60s % in a decade.And don't only take my word for it. A letter in The Times 10 years back said it better than I could. A Professor of Education at Liverpool University who had been an undergraduate at Liverpool 30 years before. He said that he used to believe that his cohort was better than modern students - until he found some of his old exam scripts in the basement. When he realised how little HE knew as a 2o year old, he stopped carping.But it's the prerogative of old gits to complain that the young 'uns have it easy. Always has been, always will be.By the way, Clegg has outdone himself tonight in his mendacious hoop jumping. He said it pains him that he hasn't been able to follow through on his pre-election pledge not to raise tuition fees. But he didn't pledge not to increase tuition fees. He pledged to VOTE AGAINST ANY PROPOSALS TO INCRESE FEES. And he didn't just promise it on the quiet. He did so ostentatiously on video. As did EVERY ONE of his colleagues.Now, it's easy to keep his promise. Vote against the proposals. Easy.
BillyStubbsTears wrote:Quotehoolahoop wrote:Quote Exams have become far easier than they used to be.Ahh, THAT Old Git classic.Evidence Hoola?Do you disagree before we wade on ? It is difficult to assess exactly why it's easier but I would think that the internet assisting with course work would help for starters.Continual assessment imo is easier than 'one off' exams.I must admit evidence is hard to come by only a gut feeling.
hoolahoop wrote:Quote Exams have become far easier than they used to be.Ahh, THAT Old Git classic.Evidence Hoola?
Exams have become far easier than they used to be.
Clearly the proposals won't stop people from attending if they are so minded, I believe the point that is being debated is that the proposed increases are going to prove to be a significant barrier to entry for alot of academcially gifted working class people!
Yes I did attend the University of Sunderland 94/98 and was part of the first intake into the St Peters Campus just over the Wearmouth bridge, and, like yourself, I'm proud to say I did. I'd like to think that this made some contribution to my lads decision to go to Sheffield Hallam as well.As for how much further in life it has taken me, well I don't really know enough about you to make a comparison do I? What I will say is if you think that attending University is all about money your sadly mistaken!
Well taking your indebtedness as an illustration, if that has arisen from annual fees of 3k per academic year, whats that going to do for someone who has to pay up to 9k per year?
Savvy wrote:QuoteYes I did attend the University of Sunderland 94/98 and was part of the first intake into the St Peters Campus just over the Wearmouth bridge, and, like yourself, I'm proud to say I did. I'd like to think that this made some contribution to my lads decision to go to Sheffield Hallam as well.As for how much further in life it has taken me, well I don't really know enough about you to make a comparison do I? What I will say is if you think that attending University is all about money your sadly mistaken!Where did I imply it is about making money?I'd like to know how you think me attending uni would have prevented the \"unlucky Alf\" comments. I didn't go to uni as I thought it was a completely pointless exercise. And i'm happy to say that it was the right decision.
Your absolutely spot on Mr Frost. Why should hard working people, e.g. tradesmen who didnt go to uni pay higher taxes for incoherent chavs to do tourism studies at hull uni? Uni should be for the top 20% intelectually gifted kids to do worthwhile studies like chemistry, engineering, biology etc. Thats where tax payers money should go, to the kids that will do degrees that are actually worth something and will ultimately improve and contribute to society later on. Not everyone should or can go to uni, it is not a right either. You have to be clever enough. The last government cheapened degrees so much its unreal, I mean some of the kids that are going to uni nowadays are calling themselves students, but are infact not even fit to work in Greggs. They are a drain on society, time to sort it.
Boomstick wrote:QuoteYour absolutely spot on Mr Frost. Why should hard working people, e.g. tradesmen who didnt go to uni pay higher taxes for incoherent chavs to do tourism studies at hull uni? Uni should be for the top 20% intelectually gifted kids to do worthwhile studies like chemistry, engineering, biology etc. Thats where tax payers money should go, to the kids that will do degrees that are actually worth something and will ultimately improve and contribute to society later on. Not everyone should or can go to uni, it is not a right either. You have to be clever enough. The last government cheapened degrees so much its unreal, I mean some of the kids that are going to uni nowadays are calling themselves students, but are infact not even fit to work in Greggs. They are a drain on society, time to sort it.Wow. I can't remember the last time i saw a comment as ignorant as this.I worked from the age of 17, and i don't have kids. Why should my taxes go towards child tax credits for those that do? Why should your taxes go towards paying for the further education of students? Why should everyone pay taxes to give 16 year old kids money to attend college? because that my friend is what defines a society.The implication of the student loan increase limits people who want vocational careers, and produces a generation of people who feel that the only purpose a university education is to earn money. It effectively rids campus' of intellectuals, artists & conscientious thinkers. Because i've chosen to study History, i've been labelled as taking a 'luxury' degree. The cuts to the teaching budget for arts and humanities sends a clear message that the government attaches no intrinsic value to a history degree, and although it's clichéd to say it, you understand the modern world through its echoes of the past.Now clearly, people don't go into teaching for the money. And there is certainly not a huge financial future in studying contemporary History, art, poetry or ancient literature, but the trickledown effect is that this knowledge enriches our culture and the people in it.Education is a right. It should be available to anyone who wants it. I myself failed miserably at school. I wasn't the brightest, but i certainly wasn't dumbest. I simply failed to grasp the importance of a scholastic grounding. At the age of 28, after serving in the forces and working in call centres, i decided that i wanted to study, i needed to study. I felt the need to challenge myself, and to see if i had the potential to become something more than a working class kid who wasted 6 years of his life answering phone calls. As Mike F pointed out in another thread, thirst for knowledge grows the older you get. Who are you to determine who is clever enough for university? And what degrees are deemed worthwhile? I won't know how clever, or not, i am until i finish my studies. If i were under 25, my GCSE grades wouldn't have enabled me to get on any course in the country, but as a mature student i could rely on life experience. I was invited to an interview, asked to submit a sample essay, and subsequently received a grade of 78%, which i'm happy to say would be more than enough to see me earn a first class degree. I currently have work two jobs in addition to attending University. I have rent, credit cards, car loans, insurance, phone bills & utility bills to take care of, in addition to the £65 a week i have to spend in fuel just to cover my travelling costs. I wouldn't class myself as a drain on society, and fcuk you for even insinuating that some students are.
By the way, I see the \"We're all in it together\" argument has been shown in its true colours yesterday with Pickles's council funding deal.The mainly Tory Shire counties have averaged 1.8% reduction in Government grant. The mainly Labour Metropoltian counties have averaged 6.7% cuts. Donny is taking a 9.6% hit...In other words, the richest and best able to provide their own services have been looked after, and the poorest have been told to fcuk off.Just like always when these cnuts are in power, it is unashamed Class War.
You know as well as I do Billy that the art of politics is to satisfy your own constituency within the overall electorate. The Tories have ever been past masters at that. They're doing now exactly what they need to do to win the next election as well. And when the riots come, they'll be able to point at all those nasty, brutish worker people and tell their own wonderful constituency that they must vote Tory again to stop more of the same. What galls is the stupidity of 60% of the voting population who either cannot see what is being done in their name, or, who actually don't care. Yes. The Tories are mean, vindictive and vicious. But equally yes, they're doing the right thing from their own pov and we are being led by the nose by our own ignorance and a right wing press full of the very same vested interest.As I keep on saying mate, bring out the guns.BobG
BobG wrote:QuoteYou know as well as I do Billy that the art of politics is to satisfy your own constituency within the overall electorate. The Tories have ever been past masters at that. They're doing now exactly what they need to do to win the next election as well. And when the riots come, they'll be able to point at all those nasty, brutish worker people and tell their own wonderful constituency that they must vote Tory again to stop more of the same. What galls is the stupidity of 60% of the voting population who either cannot see what is being done in their name, or, who actually don't care. Yes. The Tories are mean, vindictive and vicious. But equally yes, they're doing the right thing from their own pov and we are being led by the nose by our own ignorance and a right wing press full of the very same vested interest.As I keep on saying mate, bring out the guns.BobGArthur Scargill was an unmitigated disaster as NUM President, but he did have the insight of a true Class Warrior, and he knew that THAT was how the other side played the game. He once said, \"If the Labour Party had done as much for the working man when they were in power as the Tories had done for the rich when THEY were in power, there'd be no need for me.\"Never a truer word spoken.
BillyStubbsTears wrote:QuoteBobG wrote:QuoteYou know as well as I do Billy that the art of politics is to satisfy your own constituency within the overall electorate. The Tories have ever been past masters at that. They're doing now exactly what they need to do to win the next election as well. And when the riots come, they'll be able to point at all those nasty, brutish worker people and tell their own wonderful constituency that they must vote Tory again to stop more of the same. What galls is the stupidity of 60% of the voting population who either cannot see what is being done in their name, or, who actually don't care. Yes. The Tories are mean, vindictive and vicious. But equally yes, they're doing the right thing from their own pov and we are being led by the nose by our own ignorance and a right wing press full of the very same vested interest.As I keep on saying mate, bring out the guns.BobGArthur Scargill was an unmitigated disaster as NUM President, but he did have the insight of a true Class Warrior, and he knew that THAT was how the other side played the game. He once said, \"If the Labour Party had done as much for the working man when they were in power as the Tories had done for the rich when THEY were in power, there'd be no need for me.\"Never a truer word spoken.That has to be one of the funniest statements you have ever made ........oh the irony. A man who had no scruples, understood little about democratic procedures and basically like a latterday Lord Cardigan at Balaclava sent the poor miners headlong into the cannons. Class warrior indeed. ROFLMAO.This class war btw is presumably all one sided is it ? The truly democratic Labour Party has never changed laws , constituency boundaries etc to suit their agendas?
hoolahoop wrote:QuoteBillyStubbsTears wrote:QuoteBobG wrote:QuoteYou know as well as I do Billy that the art of politics is to satisfy your own constituency within the overall electorate. The Tories have ever been past masters at that. They're doing now exactly what they need to do to win the next election as well. And when the riots come, they'll be able to point at all those nasty, brutish worker people and tell their own wonderful constituency that they must vote Tory again to stop more of the same. What galls is the stupidity of 60% of the voting population who either cannot see what is being done in their name, or, who actually don't care. Yes. The Tories are mean, vindictive and vicious. But equally yes, they're doing the right thing from their own pov and we are being led by the nose by our own ignorance and a right wing press full of the very same vested interest.As I keep on saying mate, bring out the guns.BobGArthur Scargill was an unmitigated disaster as NUM President, but he did have the insight of a true Class Warrior, and he knew that THAT was how the other side played the game. He once said, \"If the Labour Party had done as much for the working man when they were in power as the Tories had done for the rich when THEY were in power, there'd be no need for me.\"Never a truer word spoken.That has to be one of the funniest statements you have ever made ........oh the irony. A man who had no scruples, understood little about democratic procedures and basically like a latterday Lord Cardigan at Balaclava sent the poor miners headlong into the cannons. Class warrior indeed. ROFLMAO.This class war btw is presumably all one sided is it ? The truly democratic Labour Party has never changed laws , constituency boundaries etc to suit their agendas?Of course he was a Class Warrior. He just wasn't very good at winning the war...If you stopped for a moment to think about what I was saying, I meant that HE understood that there WAS a class war, and that the Tories have always waged it viciously and without reserve.The Labour Party, by comparison, are pacifists. Think about how tentative Blair and Brown were back in 97. Guaranteeing that they wouldn't put up Income Tax. Sticking to the Tories' spending plans, to the extent that, by 2001, we were spending and taxing about 10% less than even under Thatcher. THAT is how timid the Labour Party is.By contrast, the Tories have never flinched at unleashing their economic policies on the very poorest and weakest as soon as they take power.So, when you've finished rolling about the floor, go have a look at them graphs and tell me how the Lib Dems have softened THAT particular Tory policy Hoola.