I hesitated before proceeding with this
post since it is based on an anonymous (but see below) comment on a newspaper site. But the site provides a list of all comments
published by this commenter. They span
some five years, and are thoughtful, temperate, and consistent with his claim
to have been a teacher of geography. His
views on the teaching of this subject are in accord with my fears for it, and
for others, and so I am going to reproduce his comment in full. Here it is:
I hope that he and many other teachers and other experts in England will contribute their thoughts to the consultation being offered by the government on proposed changes to the curriculum for under-14s in England. Links for doing this are provided on an earlier post.
Past posts here relating to the teaching of geography
include these:
( the link immediately above includes this quotation from a Trefor
Jones, who may well be ‘trefjon’:
‘During the latter years of my long career as a head of
geography I became totally disillusioned with the nonsense that I was supposed
to teach and examine. The students, staff members ( apart from the young and ambitious)
privately shared the doubts, especially mathematics teachers who understood
that you cannot predict a chaotic system. It came to a head when I ignored an
opportunity to take a group of children to see "An Inconvenient
Truth", and was promptly sent a copy of this eco-nonsense by courier
directly to my classroom. Unfortunately, following a very nasty accident I have
had to finish teaching. However, I do not miss the climate change elements of
the course which had morphed over the past decade from geography to
environmentally inaccurate propaganda. The Green lobby which has invaded so
many of our national institutions are in my eyes nothing less than rather
dangerous totalitarian fascists.’ - my emboldening)
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