Teacher's Diary

For the 2014 Thai film, see Teacher's Diary (film).

Over the course of two weeks in April 2004, the British satirical magazine Private Eye published a journal, Teacher's Diary, written by an anonymous maths teacher at what he called (quoting Tony Blair's spokesman, Alastair Campbell) "a bog standard comprehensive".

The diary described an undercurrent of pupil misbehaviour and incompetence in the school, including girls who were sexually active before they could do simple sums, students who asserted that they had rights if any attempt were made to punish them, and a pervasive attitude of indifference.

The diary, in a special pull-out section of the magazine, drew widespread messages of support and confirmation of the problem, which were printed in the following issue; the messages came not only from teachers, but from pupils too.

Within weeks, the anonymous teacher's identity was discovered by the UK press, with stories in the Sunday People and the Daily Mail. He was subsequently interviewed by the Sunday Telegraph. [1]

References

  1. It's parents who make children unteachable, Max Davidson, Sunday Telegraph review section page 2, 2 May 2004

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, October 06, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.