It seems it's been quite a while since anything has fired me up enough to remember how to log in to my blog. But eventually someone, somewhere will be stupid enough to do it. Just in the last week there's been a few examples of crashing stupidity.
First off the rank, career counselling for preschoolers. What a fantastic idea that is. Let's plough money into career advice for those not old enough to tie their shoe laces, or think as far ahead as what they'd like for dinner. Tremendous. Forget about giving them access to books, making sure they can read, or checking that they can see or hear, or have access to a decent meal. We need them to think outside the box about career choice.
Next: career counselling for toddlers
Natasha Bita | April 04, 2009
Article from: The Australian
TODDLERS in daycare should be given early career counselling, Principals Australia has told the committee drawing up the nation's first childcare curriculum.
The call comes as the state and territory children's commissioners caution against pushing academic-based teaching on children still in nappies.
And a leading childcare operator insists it is "crazy stuff" to start telling pre-schoolers about their career options.
Kate Castine, who runs the Principals Australia career education project on behalf of the federal Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations, is calling for "career development concepts" to be included in the new curriculum to be introduced nationally by July 1.
Her concern is that little children rarely think beyond what their parents and relatives do for a living.
"The argument that children should be exposed to career development concepts at an early age has been endorsed by current worldwide research," she wrote in comments posted on the department's official online forum, seeking feedback on the latest draft of the "early-learning framework".
"Reference to career development competencies needs to be explicit so teachers understand its importance."
Ms Castine said research showed students as young as six could identify what they wanted to do when they grew up.
"They identify very, very limited careers, usually associated with their family," she told The Weekend Australian. "That makes quite good sense but what needs to happen is that children who are very young need to identify there's a whole range of possible careers ... and not just what they see at home."
Ms Castine said childcare workers could casually canvass career options with children while watching a film, playing, or on an excursion.
"If they go on an excursion on a bus, you can talk about how we need people to drive the bus, or you can go to the museum and talk about scientists. It broadens their thinking at a young age."
Queensland's biggest childcare chain, the community-based C&K, yesterday rejected the kids' careers counselling as "crazy stuff". "What about letting children be children?" said C&K's chief executive Barrie Elvish.
"It's bad enough that kids in years 11 and 12 have to choose a career. How on earth can you get a four-year-old to think about what they'll be doing in 20 years' time?"
But Ms Castine said career education needed to start early. "If they don't start considering other careers until high school, there's less possibility they're going to consider the whole range," she said.
The federal Government's plan for a national curriculum -- a prerequisite for giving all pre-schoolers 15 hours of free care each week from 2013 -- has sparked squabbling between academics, bureaucrats, childcare workers and parents.
Criticism of its politically correct jargon forced a rewrite of the original draft, released last November, and now the authors are working on a third version.
The nation's children's commissioners -- state government agencies charged with safeguarding the rights of children -- have warned against an "academic" curriculum for babies, toddlers and pre-schoolers.
"Care needs to be taken that we are not creating additional years of school for our youngest children through a stringent academic-based way of teaching," the commissioners from NSW, Queensland, Tasmania, Western Australia and the ACT say in a submission.
Friday, 10 April 2009
Sunday, 11 May 2008
When hanging out the washing is civil disobedience!
Perhaps the world is completely mad and it's all our own fault if we kill every living thing on it's surface.
An article in yesterdays SMH was how some people in America are fighting against laws that prohibit people from drying their washing outside. I knew some buildings in cities did this, but didn't realise that there could be laws stopping people from loading up the Hills Hoist in their backyard.
It's quite incredible that at least 6% of household energy consumption can be from electric clothes dryers. It's even more incredible that you might need to get a law passed so that you can hang out the washing.
Getting pegged for letting it all hang out
Ian Munro in Southington, Connecticut
May 10, 2008
THIS New England morning has unfolded into an idyll of spring sunshine and soft breezes. It is, quite simply, one perfect day - ideal for drying laundry and, as it happens, for civil disobedience.
That is how it adds up in Sharon Vocke's backyard, where clotheslines are banned, as they are in much of the United States.
It is a prohibition she routinely breaches when she hangs her laundry on her line, homemade of course, since there is little joy for Hills hoist retailers here.
Mrs Vocke's line is rigged with a pulley system and slung from her porch to the garage in this affluent pocket of sweeping, unfenced gardens and sprawling homes.
Electric clothes dryers represent about 6 per cent of domestic power consumption, according to official estimates, and while the world searches for responses to global warming, Mrs Vocke points to her backyard, wind and solar power.
"It takes me about six minutes to violate my neighbourhood covenant and it's worth every second to have my clothes smell nice and to know I am not harming the air we breathe," the 46-year-old said recently in a submission to Connecticut's General Assembly Energy and Technology Committee.
The committee was considering a law giving homeowners the right to use clotheslines despite neighbourhood fears that displays of underwear would undermine property values. But as with similar proposals in Vermont and New Hampshire, the reformers failed and bans stay in place.
In Vermont, Richard McCormack sponsored an unsuccessful "Right to Dry" law.
"I did not get a definitive 'right to dry' in the state of Vermont," said the state senator. "What I did get was an energy conservation bill that includes the statement that the Government recognises that voluntary energy conservation is a good thing and that it recognises there are impediments to it." But an explicit statement, that citizens had a right to use clotheslines, was struck out.
Last September, the town of Poughkeepsie in New York State passed a "laundry law" imposing $US100 ($106) fines on anyone caught drying on front porches.
"I wonder if this is all a commentary on our consumer-oriented American traits," Mrs Vocke said. "I don't know how common this is - just the fact it was ever written into our [neighbourhood rules] really bothers me."
Line-drying advocates will persist. Alexander Lee, a New Hampshire lawyer who created the lobby group Project Laundry List in 1995, said people were anxious to reduce energy consumption and, while solar panels were expensive, anyone could afford a clothesline.
Mr Lee said the estimated 6 per cent of domestic power consumed by electric dryers did not account for commercial laundromats or 17 million homes with gas-powered dryers.
Bans on clotheslines are relatively recent, and seem to be based on the opinion they are unsightly and a mark of poverty.
"In the last 30 years, it's increased exponentially," Mr Lee said. "Really, it's since World War II, since people started moving into homeowners associations which introduced lots of prohibitions."
Martin Mador, a lobbyist and author of Connecticut's "Right to Dry Bill", will try again next year.
In rejecting the Vermont bill, Senator McCormack's colleagues said clotheslines were too trivial to be bothered with, to which he responds that is why communities should not be banning them.
"It's very hard getting Americans to get with the idea of saving energy," Senator McCormack said. "I so love my country. But I look at [it] from time to time and say to myself, 'This place is insane'."
An article in yesterdays SMH was how some people in America are fighting against laws that prohibit people from drying their washing outside. I knew some buildings in cities did this, but didn't realise that there could be laws stopping people from loading up the Hills Hoist in their backyard.
It's quite incredible that at least 6% of household energy consumption can be from electric clothes dryers. It's even more incredible that you might need to get a law passed so that you can hang out the washing.
Getting pegged for letting it all hang out
Ian Munro in Southington, Connecticut
May 10, 2008
THIS New England morning has unfolded into an idyll of spring sunshine and soft breezes. It is, quite simply, one perfect day - ideal for drying laundry and, as it happens, for civil disobedience.
That is how it adds up in Sharon Vocke's backyard, where clotheslines are banned, as they are in much of the United States.
It is a prohibition she routinely breaches when she hangs her laundry on her line, homemade of course, since there is little joy for Hills hoist retailers here.
Mrs Vocke's line is rigged with a pulley system and slung from her porch to the garage in this affluent pocket of sweeping, unfenced gardens and sprawling homes.
Electric clothes dryers represent about 6 per cent of domestic power consumption, according to official estimates, and while the world searches for responses to global warming, Mrs Vocke points to her backyard, wind and solar power.
"It takes me about six minutes to violate my neighbourhood covenant and it's worth every second to have my clothes smell nice and to know I am not harming the air we breathe," the 46-year-old said recently in a submission to Connecticut's General Assembly Energy and Technology Committee.
The committee was considering a law giving homeowners the right to use clotheslines despite neighbourhood fears that displays of underwear would undermine property values. But as with similar proposals in Vermont and New Hampshire, the reformers failed and bans stay in place.
In Vermont, Richard McCormack sponsored an unsuccessful "Right to Dry" law.
"I did not get a definitive 'right to dry' in the state of Vermont," said the state senator. "What I did get was an energy conservation bill that includes the statement that the Government recognises that voluntary energy conservation is a good thing and that it recognises there are impediments to it." But an explicit statement, that citizens had a right to use clotheslines, was struck out.
Last September, the town of Poughkeepsie in New York State passed a "laundry law" imposing $US100 ($106) fines on anyone caught drying on front porches.
"I wonder if this is all a commentary on our consumer-oriented American traits," Mrs Vocke said. "I don't know how common this is - just the fact it was ever written into our [neighbourhood rules] really bothers me."
Line-drying advocates will persist. Alexander Lee, a New Hampshire lawyer who created the lobby group Project Laundry List in 1995, said people were anxious to reduce energy consumption and, while solar panels were expensive, anyone could afford a clothesline.
Mr Lee said the estimated 6 per cent of domestic power consumed by electric dryers did not account for commercial laundromats or 17 million homes with gas-powered dryers.
Bans on clotheslines are relatively recent, and seem to be based on the opinion they are unsightly and a mark of poverty.
"In the last 30 years, it's increased exponentially," Mr Lee said. "Really, it's since World War II, since people started moving into homeowners associations which introduced lots of prohibitions."
Martin Mador, a lobbyist and author of Connecticut's "Right to Dry Bill", will try again next year.
In rejecting the Vermont bill, Senator McCormack's colleagues said clotheslines were too trivial to be bothered with, to which he responds that is why communities should not be banning them.
"It's very hard getting Americans to get with the idea of saving energy," Senator McCormack said. "I so love my country. But I look at [it] from time to time and say to myself, 'This place is insane'."
Wednesday, 7 May 2008
Baby, it's cold outside
And a young girls thoughts turn towards a steaming bowl of delicious soup.
I made this one last weekend, and it was great. Hearty, thick, sustaining. Fabulously easy, all thrown in the one pot. The family even ate it without complaint! How I can have borne a non-soup lover I don't know. Still it's rather astounding to be able to tell the 7 year old "Look it's got two of your favourite things in it- chickpeas and lentils" and have him eat it with gusto.
The recipe makes a reasonable amount, but I'd consider a double recipe next time. Too much of a good thing is barely enough after all. I used fresh ginger, when I think he means ground. I also threw in a slug of leftover red wine (what? leftover red, whoever heard of such a thing?), some very nice local Printhe Cabernet Sauvignon Shiraz that we'd enjoyed the night before.
Moroccan Lamb and Chickpea Soup
Serves 6
400g cubed lamb shoulder of neck
2 litres water, or chicken or lamb stock
1 onion, finely chopped
100g lentils
400g canned chopped tomatoes
2 tbsp tomato paste
1 tsp ground turmeric
2 cinnamon sticks
1 tsp ground cinnamon
pinch ground saffron
1 tsp ginger
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp ground pepper
400g canned chickpeas, drained
2 celery stalks with leaves, finely chopped
3 tsp orzo pasta or crushed vermicelli
1-2 tbsp lemon juice
small bunch coriander, roughly chopped
1 lemon, cut into wedges
Place the lamb in a large pot with the water or stock and bring to the boil, skimming off any froth.
Add the onion, lentils, tomatoes, tomato paste, turmeric, cinnamon sticks, cinnamon, saffron, ginger, salt and pepper, and simmer gently, partly covered, for an hour or until the meat is tender.
Add the chickpeas, celery and pasta, and simmer for 15 minutes. Mash a few chickpeas into the soup to thicken it. Add the lemon juice and coriander, stir through, and serve with lemon wedges.
Terry Durack
SMH Good Weekend
April 25-27, 2008
I made this one last weekend, and it was great. Hearty, thick, sustaining. Fabulously easy, all thrown in the one pot. The family even ate it without complaint! How I can have borne a non-soup lover I don't know. Still it's rather astounding to be able to tell the 7 year old "Look it's got two of your favourite things in it- chickpeas and lentils" and have him eat it with gusto.
The recipe makes a reasonable amount, but I'd consider a double recipe next time. Too much of a good thing is barely enough after all. I used fresh ginger, when I think he means ground. I also threw in a slug of leftover red wine (what? leftover red, whoever heard of such a thing?), some very nice local Printhe Cabernet Sauvignon Shiraz that we'd enjoyed the night before.
Moroccan Lamb and Chickpea Soup
Serves 6
400g cubed lamb shoulder of neck
2 litres water, or chicken or lamb stock
1 onion, finely chopped
100g lentils
400g canned chopped tomatoes
2 tbsp tomato paste
1 tsp ground turmeric
2 cinnamon sticks
1 tsp ground cinnamon
pinch ground saffron
1 tsp ginger
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp ground pepper
400g canned chickpeas, drained
2 celery stalks with leaves, finely chopped
3 tsp orzo pasta or crushed vermicelli
1-2 tbsp lemon juice
small bunch coriander, roughly chopped
1 lemon, cut into wedges
Place the lamb in a large pot with the water or stock and bring to the boil, skimming off any froth.
Add the onion, lentils, tomatoes, tomato paste, turmeric, cinnamon sticks, cinnamon, saffron, ginger, salt and pepper, and simmer gently, partly covered, for an hour or until the meat is tender.
Add the chickpeas, celery and pasta, and simmer for 15 minutes. Mash a few chickpeas into the soup to thicken it. Add the lemon juice and coriander, stir through, and serve with lemon wedges.
Terry Durack
SMH Good Weekend
April 25-27, 2008
Saturday, 8 March 2008
L'Inconnue de la Seine
Wow. Seems like it's been quite a while since I blogged. So long actually that They have changed the log in. It's been a while since I've been rather taken with something, but today I was really intrigued by an article I read.
Saturday morning swimming lessons serve two purposes. They teach the progeny to swim, and they let the mother read old newspapers. Today I took along a number of things including the Good Weekend from 19/1/08. I took it mainly to read an article on Peter Carey. That was interesting enough. Then I glanced casually at the next article, it didn't initially look my kind of thing, but then I noticed a photo caption using the name Asmund Laerdal. And I was in. I never knew that Laerdal was an acutal persons name, well had never thought about it, and just presumed it was a company name, and the name of a bag.
The article was reprinted from the Guardian it seems, as many things are. It had everything to make it interesting- history, medicine, literature, Paris, the possible suicide of a beautiful young girl. I'd never come across the story of L'Inconnue before, it's rather mesmerising.
A friend is in Paris this weekend, taunting me daily with her facebook status. So thoughts are turned towards Paris this weekend anyway. Let's take a look at Paris Daily Photo.
Saturday morning swimming lessons serve two purposes. They teach the progeny to swim, and they let the mother read old newspapers. Today I took along a number of things including the Good Weekend from 19/1/08. I took it mainly to read an article on Peter Carey. That was interesting enough. Then I glanced casually at the next article, it didn't initially look my kind of thing, but then I noticed a photo caption using the name Asmund Laerdal. And I was in. I never knew that Laerdal was an acutal persons name, well had never thought about it, and just presumed it was a company name, and the name of a bag.
The article was reprinted from the Guardian it seems, as many things are. It had everything to make it interesting- history, medicine, literature, Paris, the possible suicide of a beautiful young girl. I'd never come across the story of L'Inconnue before, it's rather mesmerising.
A friend is in Paris this weekend, taunting me daily with her facebook status. So thoughts are turned towards Paris this weekend anyway. Let's take a look at Paris Daily Photo.
Friday, 28 December 2007
Something to think about
as you put your cup of coffee and something to nibble on down next to the computer.
Factor by which the average desktop computer keyboard reportedly contains bacteria compared to a standard toilet seat: 400 times.
Source: Good Weekend Number Crunch SMH Dec 8 2007.
WOW. 400 times that's quite a bit. Considering we all sit and eat and drink at the computer, and well I don't imagine we do it at the other, well I certainly don't. Not that I'm advocating antibacterial cleaning products (which IMHO are pure evil), but it certainly is something to think about as you tap away.
Factor by which the average desktop computer keyboard reportedly contains bacteria compared to a standard toilet seat: 400 times.
Source: Good Weekend Number Crunch SMH Dec 8 2007.
WOW. 400 times that's quite a bit. Considering we all sit and eat and drink at the computer, and well I don't imagine we do it at the other, well I certainly don't. Not that I'm advocating antibacterial cleaning products (which IMHO are pure evil), but it certainly is something to think about as you tap away.
Sunday, 9 December 2007
I decide to join the younger generation on Facebook, just to find what the fuss is all about. The very same day, indeed within hours, the Facebook Fiasco is the lead story on the SMH site. Ah well, I've had a fun couple of days fiddling around with it thus far. We'll see how it goes, I don't think I'm going to devote my life to it just yet. There's some fun stuff there- bookshelves and Scrubs quotes. It does seem to be rather competitive, you are judged by the number of friends you have.
Saturday, 3 November 2007
Nucular Cheese
So, Phillip Adams wrote a great column yesterday, part of which reads:
It will take decades to build nuclear plants. And did you know that the much-vaunted value of uranium is somewhat exaggerated? It’s just 1 per cent of our mining exports. As Ian Lowe points out in the latest Quarterly Essay – demolishing Howard’s nuclear arguments – Australia makes more from the export of cheese.
That's quite amazing. Australia earns more from cheese exports than uranium exports! I've never seen Johnny on the news defending the cheese industry. I wonder why?
And in a truly scary moment today I learnt that I too suffer from a lifestyle threatening condition.
Thankfully, help is already readily at hand, due to Havidol.
It will take decades to build nuclear plants. And did you know that the much-vaunted value of uranium is somewhat exaggerated? It’s just 1 per cent of our mining exports. As Ian Lowe points out in the latest Quarterly Essay – demolishing Howard’s nuclear arguments – Australia makes more from the export of cheese.
That's quite amazing. Australia earns more from cheese exports than uranium exports! I've never seen Johnny on the news defending the cheese industry. I wonder why?
And in a truly scary moment today I learnt that I too suffer from a lifestyle threatening condition.
Thankfully, help is already readily at hand, due to Havidol.
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