Tuesday, 5 March 2019

HOW TO REDUCE CRIME



Between 2004 and 2017, in Glasgow in Scotland, the number of people admitted to the city's hospitals for knife wounds fell by 65%.

Meanwhile, knife crime in England has risen by 54%.

England has a Conservative government.

In Glasgow, the Violence Reduction Unit (VRU) has concentrated on social work and reducing unemployement.

In other words, 'the poor'  are being given 'a cuddle'.



In New York, Anne Heller uses the Attachment and Biobehavioural Catch-Up programme (ABC) to make families more civilised.

ft.com

Stressed kids can have poor cognitive development.

The idea of the ABC programme is to strengthen the parent-child bond and thus reduce stress for children and thus improve mental development.

The ABC programme was developed by Professor Mary Dozier of the University of Delaware.

Heller and colleagues set up a non-profit organisation called Power of Two, which delivers ABC in New York City.

The result is that parents show real change in their parenting and children improve significantly in their wellbeing.


Why do some kids become savages?

Usually because they have been neglected, or, abused.

Children can be neglected both at home and in a poorly-staffed nursery school.

Psychologist Oliver James refers to "childcarers who scrape through school and are doing it for the money, often spending the day texting their boyfriends."

(Some nurseries are excellent and have wonderful staff)


Robert Thompson's parents, Ann and Robert, were heavy drinkers and there was violence in the home. (Profiles: the Bulger killers, Jon Venables and Robert Thompson ) 

Small children need lots of individual attention and love.

Do nurseries make todlers aggressive?

UK Psychologist Oliver James thinks that nurseries can turn toddlers into savages.

Naughty children? Blame mothers, says Oliver James - Telegraph

According to Oliver James, day care can produce more boastful, disobedient and aggressive children.

Oliver James says that UK government proposals to allow child-carers to look after more youngsters will make things worse.

Nursery places in Britain have expanded at the same time as a rise in violence in primary school classrooms.

40 primary school children in England are expelled every day for assaulting their teachers.



Jon Venable's mother Susan Venables has been described as a loose woman whose neighbours "noted a procession of men friends for Mrs Venables". "She had been observed physically and verbally assaulting Jon."

(Did bad parenting turn Thompson and Venables into killers? UK ...). 

When Jon Venables stayed with his father Neil, there were violent videos to watch, including Child's Play 3.

Oliver James refers to a study in America which tracked children for 15 years. 

It showed a correlation between the hours spent in a nursery to increased aggression and bad behaviour.

"Studies show there is a direct link between how many hours you spend in daycare up to the age of four and a half and how aggressive you are."


Good nannies can be better than nursery workers.

Oliver James says Mothers who go out to work are to blame for their children's bad behaviour.

In his new book Oliver James says mothers of toddlers should avoid working outside the home.

Putting toddlers into nurseries is ‘warehousing’ them so that the government could push mothers back to work, writes James.

Oliver James would like to see the government creating a network of nannies.

The elite prefer nannies to nursery schools.

A generation of 'little savages' raised in nurseries as ... - Daily Mail

Oliver James is against the strict disciplining of young children.

James writes: "As a parent of a child of this age, you need to realise that if things go pear-shaped it is actually always your fault, in the sense that if you keep a close enough eye on them you can prevent atrocities..."

Young children "need to be in the presence of a responsive, loving adult at all times".


Oliver James attacks the methods of Gina Ford, a former maternity nurse who has become a best-selling toddler 'guru'.

He writes: "There is a great deal of evidence that very strict routines do lead to more insecure, and to more irritable and fussy, babies."

According to Oliver James, The Naughty Step Technique "often result in repetition of the undesired behaviour, rather than successful management. 

"If you are not careful, you are just creating a guaranteed method for your children to wind you up."

Oliver James writes that while babies that are left to cry may be more likely to sleep through the night, "it is the babies whose needs have been met who become the secure, calm and satisfied children and productive schoolchildren, and adults."


UK government minister Elizabeth Truss, who planned for more toddlers to be cared for by fewer nursery teachers.

Much depends on the quality of parents or carers.

Jill Rutter, research manager for the Family and Parenting Institute and Daycare Trust says: "children who attended high quality nurseries were much less likely to experience later behavioural problems...

"Nurseries or registered childminders are the only affordable option for most parents..."

A generation of 'little savages' raised in nurseries as ... - Daily Mail


Lloyd de Mause

Lloyd de Mause in The Journal of Psychohistory, Winter 1998, refers to The History of Child Abuse. 

(The History of Child Abuse Lloyd deMause - The Journal of Psychohistory)

"We cannot be content to only continue to do endless repair work on damaged adults, with more jails and police and therapists and political movements.

"Our task now must be to create an entirely new profession of “child helpers” who can reach out to every new child born on earth and help its parents give it love and independence...

" The success of parenting centers such as the one pioneered in Boulder, Colorado, for instance, has been astonishing.



"Through parenting classes and home visiting by paraprofessionals, they have measurably reduced child abuse, as shown by careful followup studies and by reduced police reports and hospital entrance rates.

"All this has been accomplished with very small monetary outlays, since these parent outreach centers operate mainly with volunteer labor, while it has the potential to save trillions of dollars annually in the costs of social violence, police enforcement, jails and other consequences of the widespread child abuse of today.

"Such a parent support movement would resemble the universal education movement of over a century ago...

aangirfan: HELP THE PARENTS - REDUCE YOUTH CRIME

aangirfan: JON VENABLES


In the UK, 19.8% of school pupils have special educational needs 

(eg learning and behavioural difficulties)

The EU average is 4%

Photo by Bert Hardy

Why does one child succeed in life, and another one 'fail'?

In How Children SucceedPaul Tough writes that what matters most is character skills.

These are skills such as self confidence, optimism, perseverance, curiosity, conscientiousness, and self-control.

In other words, emotional intelligence, as taught by good parents, good mentors and good private schools, is what matters.


Both rich children and poor children can lack emotional intelligence.

"Suniya Luthar, a psychologist at Columbia University found significant psychological problems at the high end of the income spectrum... These problems arise most often in those high-income homes where children feel simultaneously a great pressure to achieve and an emotional distance from their parents..."


Bill Brandt

"Apparently medical reasons explain why children who grow up in abusive or dysfunctional environments generally find it harder to concentrate, sit still and rebound from disappointments. 

"The part of the brain most affected by early stress is the prefrontal cortex, which is critical for regulating thoughts and mediating behaviour. 

"When this region is damaged - a common condition for children living amid the pressures of poverty - it is tougher to suppress unproductive instincts."


Website for this image...

Children who do not have good parents need good mentors and tutors, according to Paul Tough.

"Studies show that early nurturing from parents or caregivers helps combat the biochemical effects of stress. 

"And educators can push better habits and self control. 

"The 'prefrontal cortex is more responsive to intervention than other parts of the brain,' writes Mr Tough. 

"It stays malleable well into early adulthood. 

"Character can be taught."

School reform: Stay focused | The Economist



The problem is - how does a child from a problem family find a good mentor?

The best mentors are often grandparents.


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Tuesday, 1 July 2014

SCHOOLS TODAY


How are school kids treated today? MICHAEL, JIMMY

1. It sometimes seems that the elite are responsible for the sad state of some of our schools.

"Justice David Collins ruled that the Hastings school was wrong to suspend Lucan Battison, saying his disobedience wasn't serious enough to warrant a suspension."

NZ school disappointed at hair ruling.


Children copy their parents.

2. "One of the main reasons so many teachers leave after three to four years in the profession - is noisy and disruptive classrooms.

"Australian classrooms were ranked 34th out of 65 countries in a recent OECD survey that asked 15-year-old students to describe the levels of noise and disorder, the time it takes them to start working, whether they are able to work uninterrupted and whether they listen to the teacher.

"It found Australian classrooms, compared with those in places that achieve the best results in international tests, such as South Korea, Singapore, Japan and Shanghai, are noisier and more disruptive and more time is wasted as teachers try to establish control."

The lost art of discipline | The Australian


3. A study, by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, questioned more than 100,000 teachers across 34 countries.

The study found that in secondary schools in England unruly pupils are 'ruining four in every ten lessons'.

Teachers in England spend an average of seven minutes in every lesson dealing with incidents of disorder.

Teachers in England are verbally abused and intimidated more often than in nearly all other countries.

In England, the level of disruption was the fifth highest among the countries studied.

Teachers in England taught the most children described as having special educational needs

Read more: http://www.dailymail. / OECD: chattering, badly behaved students



4. Black pupils have achieved the biggest rise in test and exam results of any ethnic group including whites.

A report has found that social deprivation and the low aspirations of parents have caused low achievement among white, working-class pupils in England.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.


Eton.

5. The best behaved school pupils are in Asian countries, such as Thailand, Singapore, China and Korea.

OECD educationtoday.

However, a headmaster once told us that if you take a child from one of these Asian countries and put them into a bad school in England or Australia, it may not be too long before that child starts to behave badly.

~~~

One More Proof that the US is Controlled by the Dark Side.

NO SCHOOL FOR GIRLS OF SEPHARDIC ORIGIN IN ISRAEL.



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Wednesday, 18 June 2014

ENGLAND IS DOOMED


Riots in England, but not in Scotland.

The London government faces the problems of  a trade deficit, a housing bubble and anaemic productivity growth.

UK economy: Smooth sailing? - Financial Times 18 June 2014.


 Riots in England, but not in Scotland.

Scotland, on the other hand, has a trade surplus, no housing bubble and good productivity growth, especially in the oil industry.



There was a 25 per cent real depreciation of sterling in 2007-08.

Yet the UK's current account deficit deteriorated to end 2013 at 5.4 per cent of gross domestic product, one of the largest in British history.

UK economy: Smooth sailing? - Financial Times 18 June 2014.

(Scotland has a current account surplus. Scotland exports more than it imports)


In England, there has been the collapse in productivity growth.

UK economy: Smooth sailing? - Financial Times 18 June 2014.



England  is not good at innovation and efficiency.

The high-productivity sectors include: oil extraction (Scotland's North Sea oil) and utilities (including Scotland's alternative energy sector).

UK economy: Smooth sailing? - Financial Times 18 June 2014.

It is the Scots who have invented most things.


 The UK today

England does do well in the sectors of prostitution, narcotics and smuggling.

(In 1987, Italy started taking account of its 'shadow economy' when it calculated its GDP. As a result, Italy's economy grew by 18% overnight. National accounts: Sex, drugs and GDP )

UK economy: Smooth sailing? - Financial Times 18 June 2014.


Oxfam poster describing England

COMMENT in the Financial Times

"What really matters is the current account deficit. As long as this is negative, Britain is importing capital to blow on consumption... 

"Our politicians welcome the Chinese, and this is treated as good news, but as far as I can tell, most of the discussions seem to concern negotiations to sell them even more of our national wealth."

Remember that we are about to see the End of ENGLAND, according to MoneyWeek.


barnsdale.wordpress.com

Angus Tulloch is one of the UK's top fund managers.

He supports the idea of an independent Scotland.

He points out:

1. A higher percentage of people in Scotland go on to higher education than in the wider UK.

2. Scotland has very strong assets, including energy.

3. The London government is too 'southeast-centric'.


YES!

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