bobbysmith01
Well-known member
- Feb 6, 2015
- 806
Pathetic . We had to walk to school every day in blizzard conditions in shorts for the big freeze winter of 1963.
I was holding your hand though !!!
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Pathetic . We had to walk to school every day in blizzard conditions in shorts for the big freeze winter of 1963.
Did you read my post? I state quite clearly that the scenario actually happened at my school on Friday. The questions were in response to the person I was replying to who used hypothetical questions in their post to belittle the situation schools may be finding themselves in.
Also, we both know accidents are more likely to occur in adverse weather conditions.
Where are your own red lines, frost, gales, fog, heavy rain and why do you choose not to see a similar risk during these conditions, I accept that heavy snow is different, but it seems in some circumstances this wasnt the case.
Personally during snowy weather the schools are never quite sure whether to stick or bust, everyone likes a snow day so make an early decision rather than have half staff and half pupil attendance with its inevitable consequences.
Interesting you cite a show primarily aimed at children as an incentive. The children have no say on whether a school is open or not.
Did I say it’s more complicated than it used to be? I said it’s more complicated than the simplified view people like you are putting forward.
Let me, someone who actually works at a school and doesn’t just use it as a glorified daycare put forward a counter view, an event that ACTUALLY happened on Friday. Names will of course be different be safeguarding.
What if little Johnny lives on an estate that after snow is icy and dangerous? What if Johnny’s school doesn’t close? What if Johnny has a little brother who Mum usually pushed in the pushchair to school? What if on the way to school Mum decides to ditch the pushchair, carries the baby but can’t keep up with an excited Johnny? What if Johnny gets to the school drive and needs to cross the road? What if Johnny crosses the road but as he does a car comes sliding down the drive backwards, out of control, unable to stop because of the conditions and a TA, who is also walking to school, rushes into the road and pulls him to safety narrowly missing the car? Now the question that scares me, what if the TA wasn’t there?
Is the safety of children and adults alike really such an inconvenience to you or do you just like moaning about things you know nothing about?
Moaning about things I know nothing about?! I am real, I have lived, in fact I have almost certainly lived a longer life than you. You live in a world of 'what if', but in a very negative sense, always looking for a risk, always worrying about something that might happen. Try living in a different world of 'what if', maybe the old Honda world of 'what if', try it, Google it, it is a world of opportunities, of possibilities, not a world of reasons not to do things.
Just in case you didn't realise it, every single person on this planet is going to die, there you go, I said it, DIE. there really are no choices, it will happen, even to you, and your kids. So life becomes a matter of risk assessment if you want to put it in the worst possible terms, but some people seem to become obsessed, and just become risk averse. It should be a toss up, risk v experience, danger v fun, living against existing.
A little snow on the ground really is no reason to stop everyday life.
Oh, and as for 'actually worked in schools', so kin what? I went to one many years before TA's were even invented, teachers got battered with snowballs, and even got bullied after slipping on the ice! But never mind, little Johnny might slip over,
A little snow on the ground really is no reason to stop everyday life.
What a ridiculous and ignorant comment.Yep, believe that one if you want.......
No teacher ever in my child's school on inset day.....
And was it just a coincidence that his school had an inset day on "Black Friday".....