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Posted by clsjjcsu3371 on August 28, 19113 at 10:19:29:

In Reply to: トッズ posted by vaclvicj on June 02, 19113 at 20:52:37:

om teaching Fifteen students to be chefs?With cooking, you can make them feel like they are really good at something very quickly. They start to develop confidence and self-esteem right away �C and from that you can get into language, into science and some fairly hardcore cooking. With Fifteen, even on a bad day, people always go home having learned stuff. But Dream School was a different experience for me. Like most of the other teachers, I'd done a bit of teaching and we all think we're great at what we do, but you realise that normally you have an audience who are all onside, who all want to listen. All of us very quickly had a lesson in how hard it is to be a secondary school teacher in the UK today.David Starkey seemed to be a hit, Andrew Motion found it harder �C were you interested in how the different teachers approached their task?We all started at different levels. Starkey was incredibly structured and razor-sharp about his plan of action; Jazzie B didn't know what he was going to do; Andrew Motion was just incredibly intellectual and nice.When I wrote to them, people took it seriously and offered their time, but in the first three days I wasn't at all sure how it would go. We're all proud professionals and my first class wasn't great and I had thought it would be. I think it was the same for a lot of the other teachers. We hadn't bargained on keeping the class active, productive, putting up with the disturbances going on left, right and centre. At first, we looked weak and pathetic, then there wa
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aggy trousers, and looking every inch the mid-20th century academic. He is standing on a sea of tantalising words such as: "Feel guilty?" "How often?" "Pleasure?". Words reminiscent of Kinsey's notorious sexual history questionnaires.KinseyProduction year: 2004Countries:Rest of the world, USACert (UK): 15Runtime: 118 minsDirectors: Bill CondonCast: Chris O'Donnell, John Lithgow, Laura Linney, Liam Neeson, Peter Sarsgaard, Timothy HuttonMore on this filmBut why this sudden interest in a sexologist who died half a century ago, before most of today's audience was born? Is Kinsey's story just an excuse for another nostalgia biopic with a touch of sex to spice it up? Or does his work still have relevance for modern generations?As I was puzzling over these questions a colleague handed me Kinsey's biography by Jonathan Gathorne- Hardy. The book is 500 pages long, so naturally, being a woman, I flipped straight to the section "Discovering the Female". Soon I was deeply ensconced in Kinsey's research into the female orgasm and his revolutionary challenge to Freudian orthodoxy.The Freudian view, which dominated medical as well as psychoanalytic thinking in the 50s, was that there were two kinds of female orgasm. The clitoral orgasm was little more than a regression to sensations experienced by those women who had masturbated as children. "Mature women" were supposed to have "grown-up" vaginal orgasms as a result of lovemaking. Failure to do so was a sign of neurosis. These ideas were perpetrated, on the whole, by mal
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c meltdown, food insecurity, political repression and tensions over land and ethnicity are all ongoing facts of life that the election has not changed for the better in any way". It concluded: "Robert Mugabe has been the father of Zimbabwe in many respects but he is now the single greatest impediment to pulling the country out of its precipitous social, economic and political decline."Out in Epworth, there is a plume of smoke from burning tyres. The Balancing Rocks of Chipenga may have survived for thousands of years, but modern Zimbabwe's balancing act seems more precarious by the day. Sign up for the Guardian TodayOur editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning.Sign up for the daily emailGet the Guardian's daily US emailOur editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning. Enter your email address to subscribe.Sign up for the daily emailSign up nowGet the Guardian's daily Australia emailOur editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox every weekday.Sign up for the daily emailStephen Bates, religious affairs correspondent The Guardian,Wednesday 24 July 2002 02.43 BSTAll archbishops of Canterbury succeed to the throne of St Augustine bearing the weight of great hopes but few can have had greater expectations placed on their shoulders than Rowan Douglas Williams, the 104th successor to the man who first brought Christianity to Britain. Many hope he will prove a spiritual and moral leader
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lson.We were told repeatedly during Mr Sheridan's trial by the police and the Crown, that perjury strikes at the heart of the administration of justice and nobody was above the law- We now expect to see a similar robust response to News of the World and for arrests to take place in Scotland, and if it is shown that people lied in the Glasgow High Court they should go to prison." 6.44pm: Here's a summary of the extraordinary revelations that emerged from the select committee today.? Rupert Murdoch, James Murdoch and their former editor Andy Coulson all face embarrassing new allegations of dishonesty and cover-up. The most explosive revelation is that the former royal editor of the tabloid Clive Goodman, who was jailed in relation to phone-hacking in 2007, had written a letter four years ago to the head of human resources at News International claiming that the practice was "widely discussed" at editorial meetings at the paper. Goodman also made a second, equally serious, claim in the letter - that the then editor Andy Coulson had offered to let him keep his job if he agreed not to "implicate" the paper in hacking when he appeared in court.? Labour's Tom Watson, the select committee MP who has pursued the phone-hacking scandal most vigorously, described the revelations as "devastating" for News International. For four years maintained phone-hacking was the work of 'one rogue reporter' although it changed its position last December. Watson says he now takes what News International tells him with "a pinch of s
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