We don’t want ‘free schools’ we want good schools

Parents have voted with their feet against plans to open a flagship ‘free school’ in London. It had to be ditched, because nobody wanted to send their children there. However many more of these privately-run, publicly-funded schools have opened across the country. Newly qualified teacher Tom  from Bristol investigates…

Of all branches of the government education is always contentious- every minister considers themselves an absolute expert based on the fact that, um, they went to school once, usually private, and therefore know exactly “what it is like.” Our current heroic educational overlord has made it his mission to “reform education” by getting rid of “bad teachers” and “bad schools”; presumably by attacking the professionalism, pay and condition of teachers- you know those people who may know slightly more about education than a career politician, pissing on young peoples chances by cutting their EMA, hounding and demonising poorer parents, cutting social support to the extent that increasing numbers of children miss out on meals and suffer from undernourishment, and allowing unhealthy food to be served when they are in school. In the name of market choice, Gove has taken the New Labour project for education to its extreme conclusion, outsourcing and asset stripping as much of state education as possible to sell off to his mates in exchange for a cushy job once he has finished “reforming” our education system. Comprehensive education has never been perfect catchment areas, faith schools, selection by the backdoor and an overloaded curriculum have all hindered education. He is a key ideological plank (pun intended) of a vicious government that has dually declared war on the same kids he somehow believes, or tells us he believes, he is saving.

 

 He has achieved this great wheeze by employing Michael Wilshaw head of Ofsted, the great tool for seemingly arbitrarily declaring schools are “satisfactory” (doublespeak for no good); that they are not suitably “high achieving” and therefore to be forced into becoming academies. Another key part of this brazenly corrupt plan is the free school programme: money is taken out of the state system and placed in the hand of the great caring armies of the Big Society who again, cos hey they went to school once too are somehow experts; horrible people like Toby Young- a man who finds it hilarious that the “PC-brigade” believe in things such as wheelchair access in schools and support for young people with special educational needs[1]-  he is odious- a man who achieved everything in life due to accident of birth- son of a MP and life peer- but ask him and yes, of course his path to Oxbridge was a great narrative of struggling against the odds in the name of meritocracy (a word coined ironically by his father, Toby would appreciate the double irony I am sure)! Gove and Young are idiots but they are not stupid, these are not pet projects, these are attempts to turn education into another moneymaking scam.

 

Now, in the name of the great fear that his little children may have to rub shoulders with the working class- or, heaven forbid, people that aren’t white in a community comprehensive- Young is the big sponsor of a free school in Hammersmith- because a second-rate journalist pushy parent and his mates can do better than a school staff, admittedly overworked and undervalued but working their hardest to improve the experiences and life chances of children; some of who come from difficult backgrounds and have a variety of needs; invariably historic outcomes of class inequality. The Great Govean-Young pact is this; these children can have a chance, a new school tie and five hours of Latin a week, they can learn how great the British Empire is, and they too can succeed like Baron Michael Young’s poor little self-made darling; and if not, if they bring any of the problems of, you know, living in the real world, the Tory world of rampant inequality and concomitant social miseries, into the school, or, being born with a disability (how dare they!) you can kick ‘em down the road to the underfunded comprehensive; and attack them further and further for not magically “raising attainment” and hitting arbitrary and artificial targets.

 

Yet people are increasingly seeing through these free schools at least – the government’s power to forcibly turn schools into academies – a threat to children and teachers alike-   persists and its roll-out continues apace; as does shovelling child’s future on to the capitalist fallacies of free market and sham-“choice” in education and the ongoing attack on teachers profession status, pay ,conditions and pensions. Yet at least the free schools- you hope- are showing up Teflon Mike; the man who knows everything there is about teaching young people. In Suffolk people looked on bemused as misguided local worthies and religious cranks demanded the opening of more schools; in an area where every school is currently under subscribed; parents and local people pointed out “um, we don’t need more schools” but again Mike feel free to invest some of the money for your bizarre stalking horses for wholesale privatisation to um invest in the schools that do exist; how about providing those schools new buildings, paying their staff properly and providing kids with decent food at lunchtime. Other parents have pointed out the slight problem with letting creationists run schools.

 

The RSA stated the obvious in saying that “the impact of free schools would be enhanced if they were developed strategically in localities where new places are needed or where there is school failure, rather than investing in extra capacity in areas where the school system is performing well.” This is the case in Newham, historically one of the poorest areas in London and Britain and one, from the experience of my school days here (see, everyone went to school, everyone is an expert!) that has benefitted from ‘context value added’ the idea that although the kids may come from poor and challenging backgrounds what teachers and staff in school provide the kids is the best they can with means available- that is a great education; no pet-projects, no market choice- the Guardian summarises it well ‘In 2011 57% of 16-year-olds in Newham’s state schools achieved five GCSE passes including English and maths, just below the national average of 58.9% – a remarkable achievement in the second most deprived borough in the country.’ Thankfully when these worthies and do-gooders came around to Newham with their grand schemes people told them where to go, and even a man as driven and certain and with as much unaccounted for executive power as Gove gave up on this one- this is a small victory in a difficult fight- Gove will still happily see every school in the borough and elsewhere in London and across the country Academised, Marketised and Incentivised.


 Our comprehensive education is too important to let a destructive asset stripper get away with it. Go away Gove you are a part of a regime that is happy to see children go hungry, you want to ruin education in the name of your bankrupt and barren ideology to make yourself and your mates a bit of money at the expense of these selfsame kids whose lives your millionaire cabinet seems to take great glee in ruining. We are for an education system based on need and not greed; for a new comprehensive system one that supports children, parents, teachers and the local community alike rooted on equality; this will only come about with wider social change.

Tomlinson killer found ‘not guilty’

The face of evil

The murderer of Ian Tomlinson, PC Simon Harwood, of the Met police riot squad, has been found not guilty of manslaughter.

The verdict comes despite video of the officer hitting Tomlinson from behind, and pushing him over, during protests at the G20 in 2009.

PC Harwood is now free to roam the streets – free to kill again, with no consequences.

The police have been responsible for hundreds of deaths, from covered-up murders in custody, to brutal attacks in broad daylight which caused fatal injuries. No officer has ever been convicted of a murder for which they are responsible.

This police officer will now continue his career, and can look fowards to a fat taxpayer-funded pension.

The verdict shows that the police are totally unaccountable to the people they are supposed to protect. Just like politicians they are not subject to the same laws as normal people. This is because both exist to defend the interests of the powerful and privileged in our society.

That’s why they can get away with murder.

From Blair Peach to Alfie Meadows, the London Met has a bloody record of attacking, injuring and killing unarmed, peaceful demonstrators.

We say the police riot squads should be disarmed, and disbanded. The officers in them are violent criminals responsible for terrible abuses, which have gone unpunished.

The police, the courts and the politicians are all party of a cozy corrupt set up which looks out for each others’ interests.

The phone-hacking scandal shows that the police have been spending as much time covering up their own crimes as they have investigating others.

We say that all accusations of police brutality and corruption should be investigated by democratic committees formed by the communities affected.

The police aren’t here to protect us – they are here to police us, to keep us in line, to keep us in our place. They will never be punished for their crimes, because that would send the wrong message.

The police are the biggest gang on the streets, and the biggest gang on the streets doesn’t let its members go down just for killing a newspaper seller. That’s the message that Brtish Justice has delivered today.

PC Harwood is guilty of murder, the Met is guilty of a cover-up, and the british court system has another innocent man’s blood on its hands.

Fight cuts – defend the NHS: supporters conference 23 June

On June 23rd two conferences will discuss the most serious attacks on our NHS since it was founded 63 years ago. Massive changes will occur in our healthcare over the next few years and it’s important to work together to organise resistance and reverse years of creeping privatisation.

Our NHS is being privatised and as a result of this wards are being shut down. 61,000 jobs have been or will be lost and those who manage to keep their job are having their pension sliced in half. We must rally together to fight back and for the jobs of those who look after us when we’re most vulnerable. We need to fight to save our NHS.

Keep our NHS Public are holding their Annual General Meeting from 9-15am till 10-15am. It is open to all current members who have paid their subscription fees for 2012 but pre-registration is required.

Reclaiming our NHS are holding an event from 10-30am onwards which provides the chance to hear and discuss with health workers, experts and campaigners what changes will be made in the NHS and how these will affect our healthcare nationally and locally. Most importantly it will be an opportunity to discuss how we can work together to ensure our NHS isn’t lost forever.

Speakers include Polly Toynbee, John Lister and Wendy Savage and there will be presentations, discussions and a lively question time style debate about the future of our NHS.

If the banks were too big to fail, then the NHS is too important to lose. We don’t want to return to a age of infant mortality and two-tier healthcare.

REVOLUTION is committed to defending the NHS. We appeal to all youth and particularly student nurses and young NHS workers to help us intervene into these meetings with the message that resistance is necessary and victory is possible.

Where: Friends’ Meeting House, Euston Road, London

When: Saturday 23rd June

Keep our NHS Public AGM: 9:15am

Reclaiming our NHS: 10:30am

Unity means victory at London school strike

A school in London’s East End have forced school management to back down on their plans to cut pay and job losses by staging determined, united strike action across two unions.

Staff at Central Foundation Girls’ School in Bow took their first day of action on Wednesday 25th April which was called by the NUT and supported by Unison after talks of pay and conditions fell through.

The school staff is being threatened with redundancies and changing support staff from all year contracts to term-time only ones which means a cut in pay and the support they give. There’s also a concern about teachers’ non-classroom time being cut meaning less time to mark work, see parents or give one-to-one tuition.

This days strike won a satisfying settlement over the compulsory redundancies and pay cuts which were threatened.

The staff and teachers struck for a second time on Friday 11th May over class-room time being cut which was still outstanding.

Following the second day of action the management said that teacher’s workload will be reviewed with all new proposals going to the union before being implemented. Teaching staff will have to increase their teaching load but by half of what the management initially wanted and this will also be reviewed next year.

By all the staff uniting and striking together they managed to achieve a victory and prove to the management that they do have the power to stop these changes going through. They now must maintain this strength to ensure the reviews do happen and the changes don’t go through un-noticed.

Staff will maintain the strike committee as a joint-union committee meeting once every half term. This will oversee the proposed changes to working structures and develop closer links between ordinary union members in Unison and NUT.

Playing unions off against each other is a favourite tactic of headteachers up and down the country. Whether they are trying to push through academisation or undermine hard-fought working conditions, this action shows union members that unity is the key to victory.

Students can also play our part in supporting struggles by our teachers. By organising boycotts, petitions and leafletting we can add dramatically to the pressure on school management. School bosses can always negotiate with trade union leaders, but the last thing they want is active, political students prepared to challenge their lying propaganda.

If there’s a strike at your school, get in touch and see the resources section for advice on organising within schools and colleges.

What happened to EMA?

When the Tories came to power, attacks on working-class people were inevitable. The austerity offensive will punish everyone but the rich elites. However, some of the first people to experience the cuts were those who were the most vulnerable and defenceless.  Without the vote or any say in society, it is the young who are especially vulnerable to these attacks, and within months the Tories announced their plans to triple tuition fees and scrap EMA.

This essential money paid for everything from equipment and books to bus fare and food.  Without it, many students, whose families are already on a tight budget, have been forced to drop out of college and seek work – but with 1 million unemployed 16-24 year olds, job-hunting isn’t a much better option.

The replacement for EMA is a highly restricted fund available to a fraction of people. However, as with many benefits, applying is a complex, bureuacratic process designed to shame people rather than help them.

The student’s response to these attacks was inspirational to the movement as a whole.  50,000 attending the first demonstration and the numbers steadily rose over the winter.  While not solely against the cut to EMA, the high numbers of usually apolitical school and college students mobilised showed how the Tories have angered everyone and how they have driven young people to take to the streets to defend their EMA, their right to affordable education and their right to a future.

Although the defeat was demoralising, it left behind huge numbers of newly-political young people determined to carry on the struggle. Importantly it showed the political class that young people won’t just take their attacks lying down.

This is why Ken Livingstone, the Labour candidate in the London Mayor’s election has promised to bring back EMA if elected. This would be a massive victory, and a real blow to the Tories. If this happened we would need to build a national campaign to bring back EMA for all youth, not just those in London.

NUT strike shows potential for united resistance

After a strong regional strike, around 8000 demonstrators marched through central London today demanding an end to the government’s attacks on public-sector pensions. Though the march and rally were called to support striking workers, it became a site for a number of different groups to express their anger with the government and the austerity agenda.

When I first arrived at the demo start-point, I looked up and could only see in tones of pink and blue. The UCU had doled out thousands of bright pink helium balloons, and the NUT had produced thousands of little blue flags. The NUT also brought along a massive inflatable pound-sign which was being crushed in a vice (credit crunch- dyageddit?), adorned with the demand for ‘decent pensions for all.’ The overall effect was pretty cool, as flags rippled and balloons bobbed about in the (ridiculously) sunny sky. It was also good to see a number of Unison and PCS flags out on the demo, showing solidarity and support between different trade unionists, even if their leaders had held them back from striking on the day. Likewise, there were a number of banners from NUT and UCU branches beyond London, as well as a banner from Unite construction members in London.

There was a truck with a soundsystem heading the demo which served as a portable stage for speakers from the various trade union leaderships (sadly we have not learnt the lesson of our German comrades that these trucks can also be used to play music, lead chants, and make for a more engaging experience). I could barely hear them over the noise of the crowd, as people discussed the strengths and weaknesses of the movement, and where they should go next. Needless to say I was more interested in their conversations than the speeches of the bureaucracy (although it was good to hear Owen Jones talk about how the Tories are trying to play private and public sector workers against each other, in a classic game of divide-and-rule).

One lecturer told me that they felt annoyed that it was only a London-wide strike, and that their union leadership should be playing a more active role to ensure that everyone came out on the same day. This thought was echoed by Katherine and Ella, two teachers from southeast London, who felt that there would be more media attention if everyone struck together.

Likewise, Kester and Issy, two students from Queen Mary’s, told me that they’d hoped to be seeing the PCS coming out on the day, and that we ultimately need “as many strikes as possible” to beat the government. They also felt that the trade unions would only attract more members and gain strength through strong action and a willingness to tackle the Tories head-on. They also complained that the NUS leadership had done nothing to make the March 14th demo as attractive or visible as this one, and went on to say that they were let down by the lack of organisation on behalf of the NUS, but encouraged by grassroots student groups such as NCAFC and EAN.

The mood of the demo was determined, and a good range of people from different backgrounds, trade unions and social groups turned out to show their anger with the Tory cutters. Amy, a teacher from Hammersmith, told me that “it’s not over,” and that “more action is on the way” to stop the pension cuts. Sadly, her union leaders might disagree with her. Despite the militancy, the desire for coordinated strikes, the demands for more demonstrations, and the willingness of many ordinary people to struggle, the heads of the unions have been determined to halt action, or have backed down from calling it for fear of ‘going alone’.

 

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Pension sellout: don’t get demoralised – get organised!

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Why did PCS leaders pull the plug on M28?

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Tory budget, stealing from the poor to fund the rich

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Alfie Meadows in court – Drop the charges, fuck the police

Monday morning saw the first day of Alfie Meadows’ trial for violent disorder – after he recovered from being beaten into a coma by police batons. No police officer has been charged.

Despite having to receive emergency brain surgery following being bludgeoned by a police baton is now facing up to 5 years in prison for causing ‘sustained and widespread violence and disorder’ along with five other men.

On December 9th 2010 over 10,000 people, mostly school and college students, took to the streets of London to protest against the rise in tuition fees. It was the last of four mass demonstrations against the increase and was the day of the vote in Parliament.

The demonstration route was from University Union London and due to finish at Victoria Embankment; however a large section of the march broke off into Parliament Square.

One of the students on the demonstration was Alfie Meadows, a 20 year-old Philosophy student at Middlesex University. He was hit over the head with a police baton while trying to exit the police kettle on Westminster Bridge.

He was one of 44 people badly injured by the London Met’s out-of-control TSG thugs.

As if surviving a life-threatening injury, for which no-one will be punished wasn’t bad enough, Alfie now faces the prospect of a trial at Kingston Crown Court.

A rally called by the Defend the Right To Protest Campaign was held in solidarity under the slogan ‘We are all Alfie Meadows’ and was attended by around 200 people – a good turnout for a Monday morning in the middle of nowhere.

The rally was lively with some good speakers giving facts about how many people had been killed by the police in the past few years and how no copper has ever been up in court for it.

Reports from the court case say that Alfie was at the front of the crowds face to face with police with a balaclava on. However he was not responsible for hurting anybody and only 6 police officers suffered minor injuries that day.

These students are being made an example of and used to scare other students from demonstrating in the future. We absolutely supported the students who broke through police lines to occupy Parliament Square, and our members were leading that charge.

We need to be asking why it is Alfie being charged with violence and disorder and the policeman who nearly killed him is able to continue carrying a baton, swaggering around London, free to continue to abuse, attack and potentially kill someone with no repercussions.

REVOLUTION demands the disarming and disbanding of the police, to be replaced by self-defence democratically organised by our own communities.

Read our new pamphlet: Defend the Right to Protest

 

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Corrupt cop chief jailed – again

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Exclusive: police killed my sister’s boyfriend

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Police role in Blacklist scandal exposed

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Market mayhem to blame for housing crisis

In just a year the number of people who are homeless in England has risen by 14%. Millions have been thrown out of work and bailed-out banks are ramping up home repossessions.

New figures show that 69, 460 children are living in homeless households; this means they could be moved around towns and schools – disrupting their childhood.

Homelessness has been going down since 2003 but the economic crisis is taking its toll on families. With the cost of living and buying houses going up while people are being made unemployed or suffering pay freezes then it’s no surprise that people are being priced out of the housing market and forced to rent privately.

This situation is no accident. Speculation in the housing market by rich banks and profiteers is encouraged by the government’s failure to invest in adequate new housing. As a result there are 1 million empty homes – empty because it’s not ‘profitable’ enough to let people live in them.

These figures come in just days after statistics show that people sleeping rough has gone up by 20%.

Councils are not encouraged to place families in B&Bs and there is a six month time limit on those who are placed in them. This highlights that there is a shortage of suitable accommodation for the homelessness and that the private sector is unwilling to lease its properties to the local council.

Under a new localism act, councils will be able to move families into private sector rented accommodation against their will rather than finding them temporary accommodation.

This causes problems as families are then under the control of private companies and if they are unable to pay the rents or bills for that, will face bailiffs and court action. The slashing of legal aid has been designed to prevent families standing up for the rights against rip-off landlords.

Since Thatcher no government has proved able or willing to stand up to the property, construction and finance companies who have made huge profits from housing, leaving an economic and human catastrophe in their wake.

Few things are more important to a secure, healthy and happy life than decent, affordable housing. The criminal actions of a rich minority lead them to profit while millions of us continue to live in cramped overpriced, often dangerous housing.

We want the government to invest in building 1 million new homes, to start addressing the crisis before it’s too late. A massive house-building program would create hundreds of thousands of jobs, with opportunities to regenerate communities and jobs devastated by the crisis.

 

 

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New report in ‘cuts cause poverty’ shock

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Youth unemployment must lead to rebellion

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Apprenticeships – who benefits?

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Save Our NHS rally is a missed opportunity

Today’s rally to Save Our NHS at Westminster’s Central Hall (promoted by Unite, Unison, TUC and a few more organisations) was bland, to say the least.

One after the other, trade union leaders went on the podium and spoke of saving the National Health Service without ever explaining how we should do this. Brendan Barber kept the fiery spirit just to the rhetoric, Dave Prentis blamed the Lib Dems and Nick Clegg specially, Len McCluskey talked about a petition. None of them thought of calling for a strike. In fact, not even a national demonstration was called, which is pretty appalling.

The panel of speakers went from some candid staff and patients, to the brilliantly political as well as comical Jo Brand, all the way to Peers and MPs, who were quickly booed off stage.

The worst came when members of REVOLUTION performed banner drop and were swiftly kicked out of the hall by security (video coverage below). Other similar stunts by unidentified groups of people were equally silenced.

The event was even capable of disgracing itself the further by not allowing the student feeder march into the venue. Almost thousand people, specially medical, nursing and other healthcare students, were left outside, seemingly unworthy of participating in this media-packed, trade union bureaucracy photo-opportunity!

The focus is now back on us, grassroots and the rank-and-file, to organise and pressure our leaders, to coordinate real action to save the NHS.

In a rally that turned out to be a missed opportunity of organising the resistance, the irony lied with Andrew George, the hackled liberal democrat invited to speak – we won’t scrap the bill just meeting in halls and pep-talking those who are already prepped up to fight. We need to get out there – demonstrate, strike and occupy – until there is not one single politician in this country that can still come onto national television and dare to opine that NHS is up for grabs, ready to sale, good enough to privatize. For if they do, they will need to face not the hundred-strong audience of Central Hall, but the millions of people the NHS truly belongs to!

(For more details see the LIVE Twitter feed of the event @socialistrevo)






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Why the NHS needs our support

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Capitalism… and exploding breast implants

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Private provider admits ‘patients will suffer’

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Video: Lansley humiliated in hospital visit

Just a couple of weeks after June Hautot told him what she thought of his criminal plans to privatise the NHS, Lansley – escorted by police – had to flee hospital staff who confronted him.

On a carefully stage-managed visit to the Royal Free Hospital in London, Andrew Lansley was heckled by a doctor and pursued through the corridors by members of the public. It says everything about the depth of opposition that the Health Minister can’t walk around a hospital unless surrounded by dozens of cops.

Cameron, who recently said he was ‘prepared to take a hit’ over the NHS, won’t be happy at this latest embarassment.

 

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Why the NHS needs our support

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Exploding breast implants and capitalism

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Private health company admits patients will ‘suffer’

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