PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
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211 of 479
Tue 11th Jun 2024 3:51pm
Hello,
I love the chats on here, thank you all.
Anyway, as I wasn't saying, travelling to B'ham from Coventry station, at the top of the left side high up embankment is our lovely school. That sometimes makes me more silly than usual.
Yesterday, around lunch time I departed for Wolverhampton, very comfy on a tabled seat, whereupon I opened up my sandwich box, to a bung-hole sandwich.
That was school language for a cheese sandwich. I had made it from my thick sliced tiger loaf.
The one sarny filled my sandwich box, it was compressed with the lid on actually. Folks sat in visual range were laughing, as I forced my teeth, into my doorstep bung-hole.
I did enjoy the sarny as well as causing amusement.
My question is, do or did you have odd names for particular food stuffs? |
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Helen F
Warrington
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212 of 479
Tue 11th Jun 2024 4:26pm
We had odd words for all sorts of things but not many for food. Nudgets for nuggets, was one. Snake and pygmy pie is probably well used. The weirdest words were used when we didn't know what we wanted. We'd be threatened with gruts (like American grits) and wemmel which meant 'nothing at all'. The gruts was from some Scottish radio comedy but Dad couldn't remember where wemmel came from. |
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Annewiggy
Tamworth
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213 of 479
Tue 11th Jun 2024 6:48pm
Was your bung hole sandwich a door stop Philip ? |
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PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
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214 of 479
Wed 12th Jun 2024 12:10am
Hello Anne,
More like a door wedge! It was beautiful. Two & half inches thick. |
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Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia
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215 of 479
Wed 12th Jun 2024 12:52pm
'Shut your cake ole' or I will fill it with a bunch of fives' Not the most ladylike term but it worked. |
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Helen F
Warrington
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216 of 479
Wed 12th Jun 2024 9:09pm
I'm afraid to say anything now |
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Annewiggy
Tamworth
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217 of 479
Thu 13th Jun 2024 11:01am
Scaredy cat ! |
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Helen F
Warrington
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218 of 479
Thu 13th Jun 2024 11:09am
Meow. Just call me Tiddles. Meow. |
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Mick Strong
Coventry
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219 of 479
Thu 13th Jun 2024 6:20pm
So, Amanda Holden is to host a new TV show about adultery. Something she should know all about !
She adds " I always wanted to host a show about love and relationships" "A series about second chances and un-finished business"
Perhaps she will invite Neil Morrisey as a guest ?
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Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia
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220 of 479
Fri 14th Jun 2024 3:51pm
On 12th Jun 2024 9:09pm, Helen F said:
I'm afraid to say anything now
Helen, It works every time !
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PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
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221 of 479
Fri 14th Jun 2024 7:40pm
Hello,
Before I ever arrived into this world, mum & dad lived in both Tipton & Dudley, after being bombed out of Grangmouth Rd. Mum took over a cooked meat shop & made a good pastime selling hot takeaway food. Faggot & pea batches & so on. Dad was working on armoured car development in Bingley Hall.
Anyway, she made confectionery too. Using dried fruit, making pastry sandwiches. She called them "Fly Cemeteries".
I might have mentioned that before on here. |
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Annewiggy
Tamworth
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222 of 479
Fri 14th Jun 2024 9:43pm
They sound a bit like Garibaldi biscuits. We used to call them squashed fly sandwiches, the same as Eccles cakes. Love both |
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PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
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Sat 15th Jun 2024 6:53am
Hello,
It's Saturday, or Shreddies day.
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PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
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Sat 15th Jun 2024 7:54am
Hello,
Illiteracy & numeracy!
UNESCO, is reporting that illiteracy is now more prevalent than ever, world wide, Europe included. Germany & France highlighted.
What's going wrong?
Here in the UK, grab an on the spot sample of folk walking through Broadgate, Coventry a bastion of technology & education, the chances are that out of five folk, one will have very limited reading ability in any language & will struggle with the simplest arithmetic.
One in eight of that same sample will have such poor literacy, that they cannot recognise a number, whether it's a quantity or a description.
That scenario is now 100fold increase on the same sampling from 1970.
Someone that I have known for most of my adult life, can hand out an apple to someone, then hand out an apple to someone else, so in his mind he has quantified 2, but he cannot read the number 2. He's worked as a labourer for all of his adult working life, so it's not that he can't think. He can think.
I've got so many questions in my mind about this, but what do we on here think? Coventry is quite bright compared to many other locations that we might pick! |
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JohnnieWalker
Sanctuary Point, Australia
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225 of 479
Sat 15th Jun 2024 8:12am
Hi Philip
Here in the Australian Capital Territory - the most educated city in Australia - they've just discovered that twenty years of schools without phonetics or grammar have resulted in this country plummeting down the advanced countries rankings for literacy. Some doctrinaire "expert" years ago demanded that kids should be encouraged to "guess" how to pronounce a word, and that all kids should go through the exact same process; as a result, our five-year-old daughter was reading Black Beauty at home and bored senseless reading "Look Jane - Look Peter" at school. Fortunately, we were able to shift her to a school linked to - of all places - the French Embassy!
Quotes from the Canberra Times May 3, May 6 2024
An expert report calling for significant changes to how literacy and numeracy is taught in ACT public schools has been widely welcomed as a way to lift student outcomes and reduce teacher workloads. The final report from an independent inquiry recommended a focus on explicit teaching of core skills, standard screening of students and a system to support students before they are left behind.
Retired teacher Anna Linard tutors about 40 Canberra students in reading and numeracy. She was part of a Reading Recovery intervention program for six years but started to question its effectiveness. Since switching to a method of teaching where the phonetic code is taught gradually and supported with what is known as decodable readers, she has seen a huge improvement in her students.
The ACT Alliance for Evidence-Based Education is calling for a chief literacy officer to be employed to oversee a team of literacy coaches to provide training for teachers in the explicit and systematic instruction of phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension.
And as for maths, I despair - checkout kids can't even work out the bill WITH the aid of a calculator before I tell them the answer! Yet we have contestants on our version of "Letters and Numbers" who are brilliant. The problem is how we teach the least advanced of our primary school kids.
True Blue Coventry Kid
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