Readers of Mumsnet have savaged education secretary Michael Gove's plea for parents to act as strikebreakers.
Readers of Mumsnet – the “internet behemoth” that attracts more than one million unique viewers per month and courted by leading advisers of Conservatives and Labour – have savaged education secretary Michael Gove’s plea for parents to act as strikebreakers on Thursday during planned industrial action by teaching unions NUT and ATL.
The vast majority of comments on one of the threads, entitled “Parents becoming teachers? Is it me or has Gove totally lost it?”, slammed the minister.
They included:
“How do you feel about going into school to cover for a teacher who is on strike? Is there anyone out there who believes that this is a sound idea…. I think it’s madness!!
“What happened to schools not being allowed to let anyone over the school threasehold without a CRB!!! Oh I guess governments can just change the rules to suit themselves.
“Supervision of unqualified staff in classroom? Expertise and qualifications? Experience of supervising, if not actually teaching, 30 children at once? CRB checks? Health and safety, and safeguarding children issues? Do these things not matter any more?”
And the damning:
“Nothing [about] that man says surprises me anymore :(“
Yesterday’s Independent on Sunday reported that in a letter to local authorities, the Education Secretary:
“…asked heads to consider ‘the full range of local resources available to you from within your school staff and the wider school community to ensure that wherever possible your school remains open’.
“Asked whether ‘wider school community’ meant getting parents to teach lessons, a spokesman for the minister said yesterday: ‘It is up to schools how they want to keep themselves open. If they do that kind of thing, we think that is great.'”
83 Responses to “Gove’s call for parents to act as strikebreakers savaged by Mumsnet”
Charlotte Richardson
#mumsnet hath spoken: Gove is a cretin http://t.co/WWAWNGc #teachers #strikes
Clive Burgess
RT @leftfootfwd: Gove's call for parents to act as strikebreakers http://t.co/gynHHI4
Selohesra
The strike will punish children and working parents – the government won’t be hurt that much.
Government might even secretly relish a few public sector strikes – give thenm a chance to pass some anti-union legislation whist the country feels inconvenienced by selfish strikes and whats more all those days pay the taxpayer will not have to fund during the strikes will help the deficit. I wonder if the union leaders will forfeit a days pay like their members will have to.
Kate Williams
Gove's call for parents to act as strikebreakers savaged by Mumsnet: http://bit.ly/lQiOVd writes @DanielElton
Leon Wolfson
It’s also about attracting people into the profession, which is about to get radically harder with fees and removal of incentives, in a profession where many vital areas are already understaffed.
Teaching is NOT especially well paid, it’s a long-hour high-stress job…
(I only teach at University level for a reason. Well, plus you don’t actually need ANY qualifications per-se to teach at them)