HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHA!!!! PHIL BLOOMFIELD!!!!! SAM TETLOW!!!!!!!! SARAH!!!! LAUREN!!!!! SHAME ON YOU ALL, SUCKERS!!!!!! WHAT A FUCKING CHAV SCANDAL!!!!!
Right: 150 students, turnout of around 130 (generous estimate), 5 good candidates for head boy, and Phil, leaves a vote split, Phil around 10 (judging from those who seem to support him) and around 20 for each of the other candidate, with 1/2 getting around 25-30. Meaning the teachers vote decided it: around 80 teachers, 50%ish turnout, so around 30 teachers voted, meaning meaning Phil gained around 15 - 20 teachers votes. 5 good candidates (popular with teachers), means should be around 6 votes each, if they are reasonably split, meaning Phil must have gained around 20 teachers votes. So around 66% of the teacher vote. Sound right?
Assume so, you made a post on your blog about it, at least all I did was one teeny tiny, minute comment. Actually it was long boring and pointless...I admit.
I can sympathise. Our 6th Form had their elections before Christmas. We had to:
1) Give a speech before the whole 6th Form, and they would then vote.
2) For some reason, we were then made to give a speech in front of "Senior Staff" (the head teacher, and all the heads-of-year. For some reason.)
3) THEN they - with no explanation as to why two attempts at deciding had failed - made all of us, individually, go in front of the School Council (populated by Year-frigging-9s *no offence intended to any Year 9s here*) and explain ourselves to them, ehile being told "They'll decide".
4) In the end, the headteacher turned up one morning and gave Head Boy to a chav tosser, and Head Girl to the big-breasted do-gooder that Head Boy just, conveniently, happened to be banging at the time.
5) However! In 6th Form Elections, EVERYONE'S a winner!!! The head-of-year came into our History class and "officially" appointed me and my mate (the two other people who ran for Head Boy) "Deputy Head Boys"..... what a sodding gip.
5 Comments:
Right: 150 students, turnout of around 130 (generous estimate), 5 good candidates for head boy, and Phil, leaves a vote split, Phil around 10 (judging from those who seem to support him) and around 20 for each of the other candidate, with 1/2 getting around 25-30. Meaning the teachers vote decided it: around 80 teachers, 50%ish turnout, so around 30 teachers voted, meaning meaning Phil gained around 15 - 20 teachers votes. 5 good candidates (popular with teachers), means should be around 6 votes each, if they are reasonably split, meaning Phil must have gained around 20 teachers votes. So around 66% of the teacher vote. Sound right?
does anyone actually care?!
Assume so, you made a post on your blog about it, at least all I did was one teeny tiny, minute comment. Actually it was long boring and pointless...I admit.
I can sympathise. Our 6th Form had their elections before Christmas. We had to:
1) Give a speech before the whole 6th Form, and they would then vote.
2) For some reason, we were then made to give a speech in front of "Senior Staff" (the head teacher, and all the heads-of-year. For some reason.)
3) THEN they - with no explanation as to why two attempts at deciding had failed - made all of us, individually, go in front of the School Council (populated by Year-frigging-9s *no offence intended to any Year 9s here*) and explain ourselves to them, ehile being told "They'll decide".
4) In the end, the headteacher turned up one morning and gave Head Boy to a chav tosser, and Head Girl to the big-breasted do-gooder that Head Boy just, conveniently, happened to be banging at the time.
5) However! In 6th Form Elections, EVERYONE'S a winner!!! The head-of-year came into our History class and "officially" appointed me and my mate (the two other people who ran for Head Boy) "Deputy Head Boys"..... what a sodding gip.
(Sorry, I'm one of Reid's friends, btw)
Sounds similar to our school. Out interest, did they pretend you had 'democracy' in yours too?
Post a Comment
<< Home