Donate SIGN UP

Inset Days

Avatar Image
flip_flop | 13:31 Wed 08th Jun 2011 | Jobs & Education
7 Answers
Can anybody explain the rationale behind the following for me?

Last week was half-term in my area and all the kids had a week off. This Friday and next Monday are inset days.

Is there a reason why these two days (presumably for teacher training) aren't in half-term?

It doesn't affect us as we took the unfashionable decision that when children came along Mrs Flop gave up work, but it must be a right pain in the backside for others!
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 7 of 7rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by flip_flop. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
School holidays used to be one week longer - this was taken 'off' teachers and turned into inset days (know at first as Baker Days). There are now five inset days - some of which will be set in stone by the LEA and some which the school can use at its own discretion.
Have I got my own "Days" now? Never heard of them. Why were they called Baker days?
Because Ken Baker was Education minister at the time.
After the Education Secretary at the time, Kenneth Baker ...

http://en.wikipedia.o...aron_Baker_of_Dorking
Sounds like simple bloody mindedness to me. Why didn't they tag them on to the half-term holiday so that for anyone outside the educational field they simply aren't noticed as separate ?
'Baker Days' quickly got shortened among teachers to 'B days' (bidets, get it?), on the grounds that they were regarded as a totally foreign concept and that nobody knew what they were meant to be used for ;-)
Chris - all teachers at the time agreed they were as much use as a bidet, educationally.
These 'training days' were among the erosions of the quality of teaching as a profession inroduced by Thatcher, on the grounds that teachers clearly did not work hard enough.

1 to 7 of 7rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Inset Days

Answer Question >>