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Kate Taylor

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Kate Taylor is a sociologist, mother and tea and cake lover. When not working in sociological and marketing research with her company, Galilee Research, Kate can be found talking about political philosophy on the school run.


It’s May: the month after budgets are used up with pothole repairs and poverty schemes, and the month that brings democracy to a head.

Yesterday saw a myriad of sports halls and community centres cover their entrances in placards and open their gates from 7am to 10pm. Thousands of neatly stacked sheets, sharpened pencils and sealed plastic boxes donned tables across the country, ready to be picked up by the engaged, or indeed disillusioned voter.

Lincoln is still in the red, as Labour takes nine of the eleven seats up for re-election in the city, bringing them up to 27 out of 33 seats available. The Conservative party now have six after losing two last night. UKIP haven’t picked up any, but voting statistics show they came in third with voting numbers locally.

National news this morning has been swept with “Farage fever”, but as BBC’s political editor Nick Robinson points out, “it is worth remembering that once every vote is counted, UKIP will not run a single council, they will still have far fewer councillors than their rivals, they will not, of course, have an MP but – in the words of one Labour council leader – they will have caused mayhem.”

This is of course without the European results, which will start coming through over the weekend, and you can bet party headquarters are on the edge of their seats this time around.

The three major parties should sit up straight and listen. The UKIP vote needs to be a wake up call for the policy makers before it is too little, too late. The problem with a disenchanted public is the want for change. We are a country of evolution, not revolution.

Though there comes a point where we see hard working families starving, the poor become the jobless and the jobless become the homeless; and those whom we have sworn to protect throughout two world wars, prosperity and recession, peace and chaos fall through the gap, with no net to catch them. How is this allowed to happen?

How obese does a cat have to become before the owners put it on a diet? Does the answer lie with a party that wants to scrap all forms of renewable energy, shrink our public health service, deny equality for loving, consenting adults and still not have a solid tax policy? Maybe, maybe not.

When we look back at how our grandparents and great grandparents pictured the future, they predicted a world of equality and inclusiveness. One where by together we are united, apart we are divided. Fear breeds hatred and confusion. The only saving grace the likes of Labour and Conservative have now is a heavy dose of clarity.

Locally Ric Metcalfe has kept his seat as Leader of Lincoln City Council and the likes of Lucy Rigby (Lincoln’s Labour parliamentary candidate) can relax a little. According to policy, this will lead to greater action on poverty within the area and, amongst other things, greater travel for commuters and employees.

In practice, this seems all well. In fact, there are policies from most of the parties that make sense to the majority of voters. As the Liberal Democrats can attest to though, it’s about the believability of these policies being implemented should your vote fall upon their box.

Marking this year’s ballot paper was mind blowing. So many choices. So many bullet point policies below each party logo, filled with negativity. In times of despair, it’s all too easy to vote for something completely different. Whoever you’ve voted for, whatever colours you don with pride, make sure you know the facts. Look behind the headlines for the real, black and white data on party policy. You may be surprised.

Kate Taylor is a sociologist, mother and tea and cake lover. When not working in sociological and marketing research with her company, Galilee Research, Kate can be found talking about political philosophy on the school run.

When I started out on my career as a sociologist, pastoral care within education was at the forefront of my mind. I devised tactics and programmes to help schools and local education authorities help children; before they fell off the proverbial cliff into an ever growing abyss of truancy, delinquency and other self-fulfilling prophecies. Time and again we see political correctness keeping common sense from entering schools and it is leading to tragedy.

Ann Maguire, a teacher of more than 40 years, was stabbed to death by a pupil in front of a class last week. Mrs Maguire was due to retire from her post at Corpus Christi Catholic College in September.

Emma Place, a primary school teacher in Leamington Spa, had her coffee poisoned with bathroom chemicals by two ten-year-old boys a day later. On the Daily Mail, a fellow parent of the Clapham Terrace School was quoted as saying, “I think this one could be strict but their SATS are coming up. It just got out of hand. Clearly a joke that went wrong.” Poisoning is now a joke gone wrong?

These are but two instances of thousands of cases in which adults who have spent years learning to educate, nurture and help our children are verbally and physically abused on a daily basis.

A former senior school teacher from Lincoln says that professionals are “just under pressure to do their job. We want the best for the kids too, even though they don’t see it. So we have to give them a hard time sometimes. Combine that with the fact that you don’t know what’s going on in that child’s life, it could be a fireball.”

Last November the American Psychological Association (APA) released information designed to be used by educators in preventing violence against teachers. Not only does it speak of ways to tackle violent acts on a variety of levels (school, classroom, teacher, student etc), but also the 2005 study by Gottfredson et al. on predictors of violence – it was found that inappropriate behaviour dropped when students perceived there was ‘consistent discipline management’ and teacher’s felt confident in being supported by their own peers and superiors.

So what does this all mean at ground level? Camila Batmanghelidjh points out that punishment doesn’t work, and to an extent, she has a point. It of course depends on why the child is exhibiting deviant behaviour. That’s where the solution is, in finding the root of the problem and tackling it head on, pushing the boundaries and going the extra mile.

Along with an attitude based upon equality, common sense and consistent methods, you show a class of school children hope, and they will give you faith. You show a teacher the support network needed to help their pupils, and you are creating a tower of strength.

For Ann Maguire, a beloved and long serving member of the community, it is too little too late. This cannot be swept under the rug, election looming or not. The system failed both teacher and pupil and we must understand why.

It is not, nor will it ever be acceptable to carry a weapon, anywhere. There needs to be curricula standard lessons on the consequences of violence and violent behaviour. There needs to be openness and understanding within the classrooms and subcultures, an understanding that there are consequences to every action.

Kate Taylor is a sociologist, mother and tea and cake lover. When not working in sociological and marketing research with her company, Galilee Research, Kate can be found talking about political philosophy on the school run.

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