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View Full Version : Toy weapons 'help boys to learn'


zander
29-12-2007, 04:35 PM
Boys in nursery schools should not be discouraged from playing with toy guns and other weapons, the government says.
In guidance for nurseries in England, the Department for Children, Schools and Families says staff should resist a "natural instinct" to stop such play.

It says role playing helps create the right conditions for boys' learning and could help them become more engaged in education in the future.

Teachers have condemned the advice, saying toy guns "symbolise aggression".

The guidance - entitled Confident, Capable and Creative: Supporting Boys' Achievements - says "practitioners" often find boys' chosen type of play "more difficult to understand and value than that of girls".

Boys regularly use "images and ideas gleaned from the media" as starting points in play, the advice says, which "may involve characters with special powers or weapons".

"Adults can find this type of play particularly challenging and have a natural instinct to stop it," the guidance continues.

"This is not necessary as long as practitioners help the boys to understand and respect the rights of other children and to take responsibility for the resources and environment."

Fostering these "forms of play" helps to "enhance every aspect of their learning and development", it adds.

Better results

Boys' underachievement in schools has been a source of concern for teachers and ministers.

Girls are more likely to get the benchmark five good GCSEs than boys and more girls do better at A-level.

But the National Union of Teachers (NUT) has criticised the government's advice on toy guns.

General secretary Steve Sinnott said the problem with toy weapons was that they "symbolise aggression".

"The trouble with weapons is that the toy gun is often accompanied by aggression.

"The reason why teachers often intervene when kids have toy guns is that the boy is usually being very aggressive."

Gender stereotyping

Chris Keates, general secretary of the NASUWT teachers' union, said any nursery following the government's advice risked angering parents.

"Many parents take the decision that their children won't have toy weapons," she said.
"In addition to that, I think this is a clear example of gender stereotyping.

"I do not think schools should be encouraging boys to play with toy weapons."

But children's minister Beverley Hughes said the advice took a "common-sense approach" to the fact that many young children favoured boisterous, physical activity.

Many boys liked pretending to be superheroes or playing at "Star Wars characters with their lightsabres", she said.

"Although noisy for adults such imaginary games are good for their development as well as good fun."

But she added: "The guidance also impresses upon staff the need to teach children that they must respect one another and that harming another person in the real world is not acceptable."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/7163741.stm

'Help boys to learn' Learn what exactly?
To learn how to pick up a gun and fight for the New World Army that they will get conscripted into?

Having seen first hand what guns are capable of, it makes me almost sick seeing kids playing with toy gun's that replicate the act of shooting another person.

But the government think this is ok? And they wander why gun violence is going up all the time?

paul
29-12-2007, 04:44 PM
I saw this article myself earlier... what a lot of crap! It helps mirror the behaviour of the young uns' 'heros' who use weapons on TV.... this is just another manipulation of the mind and a hope that the next generation of army is formed....

A very sad story -- I hope people can see through this one... it is bloody blatant

on the road
30-12-2007, 02:45 AM
fucking blatant init.

jimijams
30-12-2007, 03:03 AM
I saw that article too, it's a disgrace..

Images and ideas gleaned from the media are common starting points in boys' play and may involve characters with special powers or weapons. Adults can find this type of play particularly challenging and have a natural instinct to stop it."
http://www.theage.com.au/news/world/british-teachers-told-not-to-be-gun-shy/2007/12/29/1198778767028.html

Children don't exhibit this behavior naturally, it's a learnt behavior from the media. I don't hear any body suggesting children shouldn't be exposed to violence on TV and in movies.

At a friends place the other day her four year old son was running around with a sword and challenging me to fight him, as well as pointing guns at me which I find disturbing. My friend said don't worry about it it's natural behavior, your son will be exactly the same. My son is two and never exhibited the slightest sign of violence in any form and I hope he never will, difference is though is that my son has never been exposed to the media in any form.

Violent behavior is not natural for children, it's programmed in to them from an early age.

lizzy
30-12-2007, 03:07 AM
fucking blatant init.
yup

zander
30-12-2007, 08:22 AM
We are seeing how the government and ultimately the elite are attempting to undermine the parents and any teachers who are wise to the moral implications of giving children a simulated weapon.

A gun is a man made implement, that has been designed for the soul propose of killing or injuring another sentient being, with the centre of the target being another human being. Is it therefore morally or ethically the right thing to be giving a child a symbol of this implement?

http://infinitesimally.files.wordpress.com/2007/08/childsoldierthailand.jpg

Imagine, if you were a parent, who has spent the past ten years, attempting to help a child understand that guns in any shape or form are ethically wrong.
Now this is a struggle for the parent as other children possess toy guns so your child, wants one also.
That parent is seen to be maybe a little over protective by others in society, but this is only because guns have been normalised in the past. However, if the parents moral stand on this subject is against guns, then that should be that, period.

http://www.dkimages.com/discover/previews/976/80067498.JPG

But now the government has taken it upon itself to undermine the parent, who has struggled against the odds, for so long and held firm to there moral and ethical beliefs. If a child is allowed to see this press release, they can turn to the parent and state that they, the parent are wrong, as the government must be right. And if the parent is wrong about that, what ells can the parent be wrong about?

The child will end up in a state of confusion and will not know who to listen to, the government or the parent? If the government is supposed to represent the rest of society and the parent to the child is seemingly alone in there views, then logically the child will come to the conclusion that the parent is wrong and the government is always right.

http://images.usatoday.com/news/_photos/2007/02/05/child-topper.jpg

Ultimately I see this subject as not just being about guns, but of a whole generation of responsible parents that are being undermined by the controlling power that is this supposed to be a democratic government.

My personal and moral stand on this subject is very strong and I have good reason for this, as I have seen first hand, what happens when children and real guns come together. It breaks my heart to see two children pretending to blow each others brains out, others may not have much of a problem with that image, but I do.

http://www.cap-gunviolence.org/images/toy_guns/toy_guns_250x251.jpg

If people still have trouble understanding my view point on this, then they should ask the kids pictured with real guns in this post, after they have been taken out of the situation that they are currently in, if they think it is right to give kids toy guns? You will find that, if theses kids ever survive to get out of there current situation, they will never EVER want to see another gun as long as they live.

http://www.stolenchildhood.net/images/drc_children_congolese_child_soldiers_congo_child_ fighters.jpg