Monthly Archives: April 2011

Ruskin on the virtue of imperfection

Professor Anthony O’Hear writes of John Ruskin: “He believed that the first lesson which the arts had to teach us was that nothing can be truly noble which is not imperfect, which takes us back to his distinction between the … Continue reading

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Rhymes with “high explosives” Also rhymes with “hijack”

Which side of this video argument would the accreditation cartel be on? The Brilliance of That Hayek vs. Keynes Rap: The sequel – Fight Of The Century:

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Outcome Based Education

Perfect training records for all staff are required at inspections.  Even Consultants records may be required.  UKAS seem unaware the the Royal College of Pathologists considers its records of Continuing Professional Development (CPD) to be private to each individual. Only that fact … Continue reading

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Gullibility for all

Command and control management-by-fear leads to inappropriate targets, inspections, accreditation, and inefficiency.  Mismanagement in education is leading to targets and unnecessary stress in inspections among other problems.  John Seddon described it to Parliament and it continues to increase. “While a target … Continue reading

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QIPP

QIPP.  It stands for Quality, Innovation, Productivity and Prevention .  They will be at the centre of future NHS care.  The Department of Health has set up twelve workstreams to help manage the delivery of QIPP in the NHS. The … Continue reading

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Modernising Medical Careers…Modernising Scientific Careers…Modernising workers’ thinking

In 2008, John Riddington Young and co-authors gave an amusing description of the disturbing  consequences of letting grocers redesign the health service (p66).   Those who suffer under NHS mangers will be aware of their common lack of relevant qualification.  Although the … Continue reading

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It’s happening again

In an open letter to Stevan Breeze, chief executive of the British Standards Institute, John Seddon drew attention to ISO 9000:2000 transitioning as “the biggest rubber stamping exercise in history“: “…Coercion maintains growth. If it were value-in-use that maintained growth would … Continue reading

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The cost of forensics

It was hard to make the Forensic Science Service work financially. Accreditation is one of the unhelpful costs that has destroyed the service: “But many question whether the police or the politicians fully understand the hidden costs. Denise Syndercombe Court, a forensic … Continue reading

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Accreditation breaks on the hard rock of EQA

External Quality Assurance is intended to reveal where the best intentions of good practice fall down.  It shows how individual laboratory’s numerical results compare when examining a batch of identical samples sent to multiple labs. Fortunately, it also exposes accreditation’s inability to … Continue reading

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Bureaucracy grows in the education cartel

An interesting graphical illustration is presented in an article on how the US college cartel has agreed a plan with government and banksters to turn students into perpetual debt slaves.  This increase in management probably has nothing to do with ISO accreditation … Continue reading

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