NOVANEWS
Michael Gove, the Education Secretary, has already made two announcements this week, declaring that schools should revive the art of “deep thought”, and cancelling £700m worth of school building projects. Which is handy, because for deep thought all you need is a hill to sit on and you can contemplate for months at a time without ever needing to go indoors. You don’t hear Tibetan monks grumbling, “Ooh, I don’t have a building to sit in, so how can I become at one with the rhythm of my own breathing? Please, master, my mum said I shouldn’t sit out in a strong wind for more than three days?”
The initiative is typical of the imaginative thinking within the new politics. For example, one early casualty of education cuts has been swimming classes. And in many areas local authorities are cancelling schemes that allow children to use pools at little or no cost. So we save money wasted on teaching them to swim, but it doesn’t matter because there’s nowhere to swim anyway, which is the sort of joined-up thinking this country’s been crying out for.
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