More on the new Open University natural science degree
As usual, this information comes out in dribs and drabs which is a bit frustrating but, up to now, the leaks have been fairly encouraging.
The latest is about the compulsory courses which are the level one science courses (S104 plus either SXR103 or its non-residential equivalent S155), S288 (the replacement for the level two residentials) and one of the level three project courses (SX*390). Of these, the oddity is the level three courses because there’s one corresponding to each of the existing named science degrees so one would have thought that these would all have been rolled into the level three equivalent of S288 (or that S288 would have been split into the equivalent S*288).
For those who have already started along the path of a named degree but who won’t make it by December 2014, whether or not they’ll need to do S288 will be assessed individually. Somehow I suspect that anyone who’s done, say, the L2 biology and who would have met the biology requirements will be approved, if that’s not the case then you might not be approved in that you’d have ordinarily received an open degree in that situation.
Incidently, as far as the information about S288 goes so far it looks much more interesting than the original snippets of information protrayed it months ago. In effect it’s four or five courses rolled into one and will allow you to follow pathways through it corresponding to each of the existing residentials which it replaces. Moreover there are short residentials built into it in various forms (there’s not a whole lot of information out about it yet) although you can similarly follow a non-residential pathway too. One thing that really puzzles me now is how they’ll cope with the different charging of residential and non-residential pathways and, if there are a number of these mini-residentials, how the students will afford the travel costs for them.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.More Kumon certificates
Kumon has a “praise at every opportunity” philosophy so over the early part of the year we were running at a couple of certificates per month for most months.
With the summer and the extra subject for each of the little guys that pace has slowed somewhat as they’re going through the same number of sheets for both subjects together as they’d been doing for one subject before. Thus, we’ve now reached the point where we’ll have a little flurry of certificates over the next month or so followed by nothing until around Christmas.
Our original theory was that as they were on holiday they’d be able to do more of the Kumon work but it didn’t pan out like that as they were if anything even more tired after a day of holiday activity than after a day of school activity. With school starting soon we’re not sure what to do re doing both subjects so are initially considering September a trial month before we make our minds up.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Finally the SX270 investigative biology write-up is complete
It turned out that the writing up didn’t take all that long once I got around to sitting down to actually do it.
I ran with the experiment which we’d done on the respiration rates of skin and brain tissue basically because that seemed the most complete experiment that we’d done. Second choice would have been the one on the chlorophyll response to light but, as with nearly all the plant experiments, that one didn’t pan out quite as expected.
I had a look at the equivalent write-up of the virtual experiments that I did for the psychology course last year and they’re totally different. The overall feel of the psychology one is very much that of a virtual experiment with little of the gritty detail that the biology one contains. Sadly, next year is the last run of this particular biology residential but at least I’ve the two level 3 ones to look forward to over the next two years and, perhaps, to two chemistry ones as well.
All that remains now is to get that printed, packaged and posted and then I’ll have no excuse not to finish off the astronomy TMAs.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Getting started on SK185
Although my plan was to leave starting this one ’til October, I couldn’t resist taking a little peek at it last night.
It feels very much like the part of the chemistry A-level I did which covered the practical applications of chemistry. Just as that drew me into chemistry back then, so too it did last night and I found my “little peek” being enough to finish the first chapter.
That first chapter covers quite a bit of ground running from the very basics of atoms and molecules right up to the structure of the alkanes. Quite a leap if you’ve not done chemistry before but many bits of it came back to me.
The second chapter which I’ve almost completed scouts around the development of aspirin, using it to introduce a number of chemistry concepts as it goes along. I’d say that it would be moving at a fair pace if you’d not encountered any of this before and even for me it was starting to introduce quite complex ideas towards the end.
Somehow I suspect that I’ll be finishing this well ahead of my original timetable of pre-Christmas although there are a couple of TMAs for other courses that need doing over the next couple of weeks so I’ll mainly be looking at this in the evenings.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Are the Social Services people a good thing or not?
With my Mum being over 83 now she’s acquired a social worker as I guess do a lot of older people these days.
In some ways that’s handy as it’s given us access to a day care centre which lets her get out to socialise with people around her own age. That’s a good thing as what happened over the previous decades was that with Dad going out the majority of the friends that “they” acquired over that time were actually his friends which accentuated the problem of the increasing age of the friends even more.
However, where it’s not so nice is the sheer level of what seems like interference in the life of the family that having a social worker entails. Hardly a week goes by when Elizabeth isn’t calling in for something or other or rather tries to call in as we’re out quite a lot. That being out doesn’t go down too well as there seems to be the assumption that you’ll be there when the social worker calls, regardless of when they call.
The level of interference seems sure to go up a notch thanks to them pushing for Mum to be declared mentally incompetent. Now, I’ll grant that Mum’s mind isn’t what it was ten years back and indeed she moves around a lot more slowly too but, frankly, I think that having her declared mentally incompetent by a court is totally over the top. What it actually means is that Social Services get to review all of her finances and spending which seems to me to be incredibly interfering. Moreover, I’m supposed to keep her in the house or go everywhere with her. Thus, her regular walks to the shops would have to stop “in case she gets lost”. OK, I imagine the day will come when she will get lost on her way to or from the shops but that day isn’t here yet and putting her under what’s effectively house arrest seems far from reasonable.
Overall, I’d say that they’re not such a good thing at all. So far the only point in their favour is that they’ve organised getting her into a day centre but we’d have managed that independently if need be and any plus points are far outweighed by the interference.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.