Steve Harpur
Brummie babby
Bilberry Hill : Hello, I drove past there today (Thursday 5 aug. 21) and can confirm that all the windows and doors, are now boarded up with metal sheeting. Cheers......Steve
Lyn, I am just rereading this thread. And to your point (at least with me) you never know where life takes you. I always want to be an engineer around tools, which lead to manufacturing to factory automation and then to managing a car body plant making bodies for BMW, Mercedes, Honda & Toyota, all premium vehicles. Then to an engine company right out of the blue into global operations. There are so many twists and turns that life gives us, you never really know until you get there!i have found the last few posts very interesting to read but one thing does strike me and that is just how we all in some shape or other helped to keep the world turning...no one person is any better or worse than the next in terms of what jobs we do/did ..everyone plays a part in keeping the wheels of industry/economy turning and obviously some professions take longer than others to perfect..imagine if we all chose the same profession what a pickle we would be in...i have always admired people like eric who went into the motor trade who could no doubt strip down an engine blindfolded and put it back together again and here is me who cant even change a plug lol..one thing is for certain though and that is we all need each other
lyn
Got the headache!If you'd like to give yourself a headache about what was going on at that time take a read of Hansard.
https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1949/jul/05/education
its true isnt it mike the young one today wouldnt get 6 interviews never mind being offered 5 out of the 6...i wished i had thanked mom and dad while they were still with me but i guess its only when we ourselves grow older and wiser that we think about these things..i have no doubt my own 4 children will think the same when they are my age...its just the way it isI agree about not realising the sacrifices till later, though I am sure your parents felt they were rewarded by how well you did.
Lyn - I too had a large choie of jobs. If only present youngsters had the same choice
I think that only applied if there were no other schools with the 3 mile zone, something that my parents didn't work out until I had been offered a place. The generosity of the City was really that of the rate and taxpayers!As the school I attended was over 3 miles from home Birmingham authority paid for the bus fare, thankfully. The city was very generous.
Absolutely my mom gave me bus money every day…..I always walked home and saved the money. When I was older I went on my bike but nothing from the city. We had no car, dad almost never worked and new clothes were a rarity until I got a part time job after school at 14.I think that only applied if there were no other schools with the 3 mile zone, something that my parents didn't work out until I had been offered a place. The generosity of the City was really that of the rate and taxpayers!
John, not only the distance between but the number of people. In another thread on workhouses there were some statistics from the 18 century, unfortunately this is not new. ( I-won’t say any more).Perhaps things were a little easier for my family, in that there were only we twins, and both parents worked. There was always a car in the drive, even if some of the cars had been in quite a few other drives before Dad bought them! Because of my brother’s disability we made regular trips to London specialists which must have been a drain on the family resources and spent many hours in the Birmingham Children’s Hospital too, those murals in the big waiting room held my interest only for so long…
In terms of bus fares, Staffs County seem to have applied the same rules as Birmingham, our village being more than three miles from school, bus passes for the Midland Red were issued until I left the sixth form. These did not seem to be income related as one of the group had very exalted parents. Like previous correspondents, I am sure that I did not really understand or appreciate the efforts of my parents in raising my brother and me to manhood free from day to day worries about life.
Of more concern now seems to be that the distance between the barely scraping through and the comfortably off seems now to be wider than ever, and widening.
A lot of this is close to home. Mom was a single mom and goodness knows how she kitted me out for grammar school. My wife tells me that mom once shared with her that she had had some help from her father. Mom was an only child and her dad had been widowed at about sixty. So maybe this was true.I have the impression that all of the working class children who went to Grammar schools had parents who struggled to pay for our uniforms.
Its amazing how our parents did it. Looking a this and Jim's note above. There was a will and they found a way!The City of Birmingham Education Committee rules for assisted travel in 1960 plus starting papers from Saltley Grammar School. Probably cost over £11 for school uniform at a time when a bus conductor got about £13 per week
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Walsall, like Birmingham. still has grammar schools. I went to one myself (all girls) and I think it taught people how to apply themselves to their work. Both my children attended grammar schools and whereas it suited my son, my daughter wasn't happy at hers. I think that, if you go to a single-sex secondary school, it is important to take part in a mixed-sex out-of-school activity! I am definitely in favour of more grammar schools! I think my junior school geared its lessons to passing the 11+ and my mother seemed to feel that not to pass it would be quite shameful. The first thing we did when we reached our new school was some tests to see which stream we would be in. When I passed the 11+, my grandmother gave me a wristwatch as a reward.I am gathering recollections of sitting the 11+ examination in Birmingham in the 50s and 60s, for a essay about the introduction of comprehensive schools. Also of interest is the reasons why a place at a grammar school was not taken up. Do respondents feel that more grammar schools should be created and if so why?
Diane, it sounds like my early years mirrored yours. In secondary school I did well! I slowed down but thanks to some good friends and future father in law became motivated and went to university at night after I was married.I failed the second part of my 11 plus, and so no Grammar school for me, and neither was the opportunity for a Comprehensive education simply because I lived the wrong side of Kingstanding Road.
I have written before my about my ability to read extremely well from a young age, but had no idea how to spell a majority of words, and even to this day I have to stop, and think how to break down certain words, because I could easily spell them how I hear or read them.
I was a baby boomer, but the youngest child with siblings 12, and 14 years older than me. Money always appeared tight, and only my Dad worked. I was born after Dad came home from the war, and he was 41, my Mom 40.
Really my Secondary School education was awful looking back. I was much to sensitive, but loved lessons, but the change from Junior School to Senior was for me nightmare until the time I left at 15, two months after my birthday, and started work first week in January having left in the December.
Had 6 jobs both factory, and office before I went into nursing at the age of 19.
However, I really only hit my prime education wise at 49/50 when I did a university conversion course from SEN to RGN.
Have I some regrets regarding education perhaps, but I have had a very full life.
I also have a couple of friends who are university educated, and have a number of extremely good degrees, but have not a ounce of common sense at times.
Like my husband said he’s build a house smart, not book smart .
We all need each other in someway.
One of the main reasons for the introduction of Comprehensive education was the way the grammar/secondary system led to 80% of children feeling like failures because the were not allocated a grammar school place. The places were very much dependant on numbers in your area for boys and girls. The place numbers were often disproportionate. Middle class/wealthier areas had more places!Looking at the amount of 11 plus passes here it would appear I’m the only thicko here . Am I on the right forum , I’m inclined to ask myself ? Perhaps I’ll look for a forum Dorks United !
Thanks for your reply alas it’s too late for me to try and turn it around .One of the main reasons for the introduction of Comprehensive education was the way the grammar/secondary system led to 80% of children feeling like failures because the were not allocated a grammar school place. The places were very much dependant on numbers in your area for boys and girls. The place numbers were often disproportionate. Middle class/wealthier areas had more places!
I was in a small Catholic junior school in Sutton Coldfield. I was sent to a Catholic mixed Secondary Modern over the border into Birmingham where I was given the opportunity to take the 13+. I then transferred back to a mixed Grammar school in Sutton. I never settled into that school because I had missed so much. I didn't take exams there and it was only in my 20s that I took O levels and Teaching Qualification. I then did my degree part time in the evenings whilst teaching in my early 30s. It was the only way to climb the promotion ladder. I always felt that I was playing catch up and as a teacher, knew that the old system was flawed.
It is never to late, I found the best job I ever had in my sixties and carried on for another 27 years.Thanks for your reply alas it’s too late for me to try and turn it around .
Bob, absolutely! I made a job change at 64 and built a very nice career for almost ten yours (a long way from 27). it was because of recurring physical health issues that I stopped. I had a lot of fun, used all of my learned skills and met some very good new friends.It is never to late, I found the best job I ever had in my sixties and carried on for another 27 years.
Bob