Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Graham Stuart on the CSF Bill and Home Education

...from 13 mins into this interview.

8 comments:

  1. Anonymous8:57 am

    for the time being he said! why did he have to bring up left wing home educators?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous11:15 am

    Good interview. I think he mentioned 'left wing' HEers because normally left wingers would support Labour. Only Labour tried to bite them.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous1:13 pm

    he also said we to small a group for M.P's to be worrying about we dont have enough votes so M.P;s do not care about us!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous1:45 pm

    We may be a small group but we have lots of friends and relatives and we are so charming we can persuade many many other people NOT to vote for MPs etc. who make our lives difficult!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Excellent Blog! I really admire your thinking and the way you have put these information in this post. Thanks for sharing an informative post.

    ReplyDelete
  6. The fact that Alison Sauer, who is a member of all the main HE lists, has not come forward to deny the rumours circulating about her involvement with Graham Stuart and his new guidelines, makes it a racing certainty that she is, as she has told her friends, tasked with writing them. She has not been doing so unaided. Fiona Nicholson's name has also been mentioned and it is true that she was the first person whom I thought of in this connection. I find it unlikely now. I had quite an amicable relationship with one home educating mother, exchanging emails regularly, until I was unwise enough to crack a light hearted joke about Fiona on this blog. Whereupon my pen-pal was furious, because she was a good friend of Fiona's. This same person has now been asking questions on Graham Stuart's facebook wall. She would hardly be asking about these new guidelines if Fiona Nicholson were mixed up in them.

    [url=http://www.dissertationhelpindia.com]Dissertation Help[/url]

    ReplyDelete
  7. The original use seems to be in Horace's first book of Epistles: dimidium facti qui coepit habet: sapere aude, incipe ("He who has begun is half done: dare to know!").[1] It can also be translated as "Dare to be wise". The phrase forms the moral to a story where a fool (naive person) waits for the stream to stop before crossing it. "He who begins is half done. Dare to be wise. Make a beginning." is a loose translation. Horace's words suggest the value of human endeavour, of persistence in reaching a goal and of the need for effort in overcoming obstacles.

    Dissertation Help


    Dissertation Topics


    Dissertation writers from india


    uk dissertations


    spss dissertation help


    dissertation india


    dissertation samples


    dissertation help india

    ReplyDelete
  8. Graham Stuart on the CSF Bill and Home Education thanks for share this information

    ReplyDelete