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Working class? Don't think that Oxbridge is for you.

(484 Posts)
volver Thu 09-Jun-22 13:08:03

She's the gift that keeps on giving, isn't she?

www.lbc.co.uk/news/working-class-people-told-to-aim-lower-than-oxbridge-by-social-mobility-tsar/

To be fair, we haven't heard the whole speech yet so it might not come out this way when she actually says it.

growstuff Thu 09-Jun-22 16:17:38

Callistemon21

She's annoyed me previously but I am trying to work out what she wishes to achieve.

If she's saying that 50% of students don't want to go to university or that it is not the best for them academically, then those 50% should be given every opportunity to achieve the very best they possibly can.

I didn't think she was saying that poorer children who are extremely bright should be denied a place at Oxford or Cambridge or given every opportunity to go.

She's the country's social mobility tsar. Giving out the message that Oxbridge isn't the right place for poorer children is just so wrong. Maybe she could actually do her job and come up with some kind of solution to the low attainment of young people in areas such as the North East, which is holding them back.

volver Thu 09-Jun-22 16:15:39

growstuff ??

growstuff Thu 09-Jun-22 16:14:38

volver

MerylStreep

FarNorth

Has no-one here read the article?

I have and agree with every word. She’s one of the few who really ^gets it^

No she doesn't! Jeezy peeps.

There is value in what she says about setting achievable goals for everyone. For one person, that might be getting to Oxbridge. For another it might be becoming the first person in your immediate family to get a permanent job.

But why in God's name does she phrase it this way: Stop fixating on getting poor children to university and celebrate "small steps up the ladder", Boris Johnson's social mobility chief has said.

Why not say Stop fixating on getting not very intelligent children to university? Because she is associating being poor with being not to cope with being at University, that's why. She makes my blood boil, really she does.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-61745817?at_campaign=KARANGA&at_medium=RSS

I've got used to her platitudes, so my blood no longer boils. What does make my blood boil is that people sheepishly swallow what she says. She knows perfectly well how her words will be reported by the press and plays the game.

volver Thu 09-Jun-22 16:13:06

No, that's just something you've made up to try to make me look unpleasant, isn't it?

I was actually thinking about the education I had in a state secondary school that didn't think I had to not speak in the corridors or that I thought Maths was too hard. And didn't exclude children who they didn't think were likely to pass all their exams and so make the school look bad.

And taught me to construct very convoluted sentences. ?

Callistemon21 Thu 09-Jun-22 16:10:40

Or can detect BS?

Callistemon21 Thu 09-Jun-22 16:08:59

Not so much WPIS, more having had a proper education unlike anything that MissSnuffy can imagine

Are you saying that only people who have been to university then gone on to take a PhD have had a proper education?

Callistemon21 Thu 09-Jun-22 16:07:05

She's annoyed me previously but I am trying to work out what she wishes to achieve.

If she's saying that 50% of students don't want to go to university or that it is not the best for them academically, then those 50% should be given every opportunity to achieve the very best they possibly can.

I didn't think she was saying that poorer children who are extremely bright should be denied a place at Oxford or Cambridge or given every opportunity to go.

volver Thu 09-Jun-22 16:05:16

Are they all working class? Serves them right then.

DiamondLily Thu 09-Jun-22 16:02:32

There are a lot of graduates, from all Uni's, flipping burgers. A degree isn't always the best path to success.

volver Thu 09-Jun-22 16:01:15

Baggs

Quite a lot seems to make your blood boil, V. Some of it is based on Worst Possible Interpretation Syndrome, I think.

Of all the people that make my blood boil, she probably comes top.

I could live with a monarchy even, if only everyone could be aware of Birbalsingh's Emperor's New Clothes.

Not so much WPIS, more having had a proper education unlike anything that MissSnuffy can imagine, as a result of which it became possible to identify BS when I see it.

Baggs Thu 09-Jun-22 15:56:42

Quite a lot seems to make your blood boil, V. Some of it is based on Worst Possible Interpretation Syndrome, I think.

Hetty58 Thu 09-Jun-22 15:55:30

Volver: 'She makes my blood boil' - me too - what a load of old twaddle. I wouldn't even assume that intelligence or background are deciding factors in success - when hard work and the right attitude are so vital - and take us so far.

Callistemon21 Thu 09-Jun-22 15:55:13

Working class? Don't think that Oxbridge is for you
Is that what she is actually saying?

Not every student from every walk of life, rich or poor, will be capable of gaining a place at Oxford or Cambridge. That is a fact. Those from poorer, disadvantaged backgrounds should be given the opportunity to do so if they are able.

She says:
If a child of parents who were long-term unemployed, or who never worked, gets a good job in their local area, isn't that a success worth celebrating?
Yes, it is but if they are capable of achieving a place at Oxford or Cambridge, they should be encouraged.

Would we really say that it doesn't count as social mobility because they are not a doctor or lawyer?" she will ask.
No, I wouldn't. Any improvement of someone's situation has to be a positive move, as long as their opportunities are not limited in the future.

Ms Birbalsingh and Alun Francis, her deputy, will argue that the widening of access to university has not always helped social mobility while the 50% of pupils who do not go on to higher education have suffered from a lack of public attention.
I think that's true. More help and further education is needed for those who do not want to go on to higher education but would be able to bring the necessary skills to the future workforce, which we so desperately need.
That 50% are not being helped as they should be into further education, apprenticeships which limits their future prospects and is detrimental to society and the economy as a whole.

"What can we do for those young people and adults who have not followed the higher education pathway but still need a route to high skills and good occupational opportunities?" she will ask.
The Big Question.

We are in desperate need in this country of young people to train and achieve the skills we need for the future. University is not for everyone but the opportunity for further education and apprenticeships as well as higher education is essential.

Further education and apprenticeships should be valued and not looked on as a second class choice.

We need skilled people.

volver Thu 09-Jun-22 15:44:46

MerylStreep

FarNorth

Has no-one here read the article?

I have and agree with every word. She’s one of the few who really ^gets it^

No she doesn't! Jeezy peeps.

There is value in what she says about setting achievable goals for everyone. For one person, that might be getting to Oxbridge. For another it might be becoming the first person in your immediate family to get a permanent job.

But why in God's name does she phrase it this way: Stop fixating on getting poor children to university and celebrate "small steps up the ladder", Boris Johnson's social mobility chief has said.

Why not say Stop fixating on getting not very intelligent children to university? Because she is associating being poor with being not to cope with being at University, that's why. She makes my blood boil, really she does.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-61745817?at_campaign=KARANGA&at_medium=RSS

Baggs Thu 09-Jun-22 15:42:08

The title of that article is misleading too. Nobody is "telling" working-class people to aim lower. They are just saying there are plenty of other routes to success.

Baggs Thu 09-Jun-22 15:38:49

Now I'm wondering, somewhat amusedly, if the same people who are complaining about this are the same ones who complain that too many politicians are Oxbridge PPE-ers.

And, by the way, Oxford intake from state schools is (and has been for some time) steadily increasing, especially post-grads.

MerylStreep Thu 09-Jun-22 15:34:30

FarNorth

Has no-one here read the article?

I have and agree with every word. She’s one of the few who really gets it

volver Thu 09-Jun-22 15:33:18

Baggs

Given the success of her school, you'd think people would listen carefully to what she has to say.

Lots of people listen. She really does talk rot though.

volver Thu 09-Jun-22 15:32:30

Ms Birbalsingh will argue that social mobility is not getting worse and that the picture is more "complex"

"Ms Birbalsingh will argue" that night is day if it gets her in the media.

growstuff Thu 09-Jun-22 15:32:02

Baggs

"Ms Birbalsingh will argue that social mobility is not getting worse and that the picture is more "complex""

In a nutshell.

But of course there follows a high degree of apparently deliberate misunderstanding on GN.

Hey ho ?

What misunderstanding?

Ms Birbalsingh is a self-publicising cultural warrior. That's what she's good at.

Baggs Thu 09-Jun-22 15:31:11

Given the success of her school, you'd think people would listen carefully to what she has to say.

growstuff Thu 09-Jun-22 15:30:56

Urmstongran

I don’t read Twitter.
Maybe she is ‘mad as a box of badgers’. Her school is popular and she gets results. It’s very strict. No bullying is tolerated. Pupils feel safe and do well. That in itself is a rarity these days.

Do you know the school personally?

Baggs Thu 09-Jun-22 15:30:33

"Ms Birbalsingh will argue that social mobility is not getting worse and that the picture is more "complex""

In a nutshell.

But of course there follows a high degree of apparently deliberate misunderstanding on GN.

Hey ho ?

growstuff Thu 09-Jun-22 15:30:16

Germanshepherdsmum

Did they come from disadvantaged backgrounds though, visgirl? That’s the point, and having a state education doesn’t mean you’re disadvantaged. Oxbridge bend over backwards to take students from state schools nowadays. But imagine coming from a background where people had no table to eat at and being plunged into dining in hall, with more cutlery to cope with than you’ve ever seen.

Those kind of skills can be taught. It wouldn't be beyond anybody with the brains to get into Oxford or Cambridge.

My partner came from a very ordinary background and went to a state school. He was taught table manners, but I know where he lived and it most certainly wasn't luxurious. He went to Oxford and then to Cambridge to do his PhD, where he was a lecturer before becoming a professor at a Russell Group uni.

This was in the 1970s, when there weren't many state school pupils. His first term was grim because the public school boys took the pee out of him, but he soon learnt - being brighter than many of them must have helped! It opened his eyes to a world he would never have known, as did my own university experience. How dare anybody deny bright students that opportunity!

growstuff Thu 09-Jun-22 15:22:10

Germanshepherdsmum

I’m suggesting that some disadvantaged students would be happier, and maybe perform better, elsewhere. Suicide rates amongst students don’t make for pleasant reading.

Why would they be happier?

This kind of stuff is just so patronising. The kind of young people who go to Oxford and Cambridge are exceptional and should never be told it's not for them.