mixed_biscuits
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mixed_underscore_biscuits - your poetic license is hereby revokled!![]()
You'll have to have your secretarial qualification revokled too!
mixed_underscore_biscuits - your poetic license is hereby revokled!![]()
Pfft, who needs a qualification to secrete?
(A license to spill?)
Yeah, they've tried a pilot scheme in Bridgend. Be interesting to see how that works out.
Pfft, who needs a qualification to secrete?
(A license to spill?)
I would be but Tea just completely out-punned me. I feel exonerated and free to get on with my life.you should be ashamed of yourself noel
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The point that he's making isn't a particularly psychological one anyway, though - pretty much the only psychological point he makes is that with a meritocratic selection process, there'd be a strong correlation between your IQ and how sought-after a university you can get into.Yeah, and I was amused that The Guardian, when they reported this, contrasted the views of Dr Charlton with the president of the NUS, the general secretary of the UCU, and Bill Rammel, who all obviously have authoritative perspectives on evolutionary psychology.
Anyway, I think that it's a lot more socio-cultural than genetic. That's the only way to explain the mass migration of my parent's generation from poverty to comfortable middle class afluence, IMHO.
....I think if he'd finished by saying something to the effect of "the government should be doing something serious about the inequalities in the earlier stages of education and the increasing social stratification that are at the root of the problem rather than having a ill-informed bash at an easy target to make it look like they're doing something" then what he was actually saying in the report would have been clearer, but that would technically be veering off the topic of his paper and away from the conclusions that he can draw from his evidence into his political views...
IQ will always correlate positively with higher social status - people (aim to) rise to their level.
How do you think people doing menial jobs fail to get better paid jobs in the first place?
Aspirations = v. important.
And that -- how much one has to gain -- is a matter of perception.
Yeah, but you'd have to be a bloody bright kid to significantly improve your parents' jobs for them...IQ will always correlate positively with higher social status - people (aim to) rise to their level.
How do you think people doing menial jobs fail to get better paid jobs in the first place?
Yeah, but you'd have to be a bloody bright kid to significantly improve your parents' jobs for them...
I think there's tension.
If my grandparents were young now, would my parents make the leap from working class to middle class? Our culture is very different. Who knows, perhaps they would, but I doubt it.