MattS":2tq5fnkj said:I guessed it was a safety reason for not being used here, there’s a lot of blade on show but given the blade is pushing down into the table it looks a fairly predictable tool?
MattS":3gf2qh52 said:Here’s a link Andy - about 2.5mins in
https://youtu.be/zDkstkzk1mM
Yes using it to trim back a tenon. I guessed it was a safety reason for not being used here, there’s a lot of blade on show but given the blade is pushing down into the table it looks a fairly predictable tool?
Well it made me wince watching him, it’s so very easy to do, just one slip, and looking back you wonder how you were so stupid.AJB Temple":9za77sut said:Well. That was seriously good quality work. I did not feel that he was being unsafe. Doing some things I would say are not common here, but seemed 100% tool and wood aware. Interesting finishing method with the wiper glove.
Agreed, good quality work, but a very, very, simple, uncomplicated thing to put together. ‘Benign’ timber with no curves in it whatsoever. That’s the type of project I would have expected a reasonably competent GCSE student to attempt, though made to a much less precise standard.AJB Temple":zknib13z said:Well. That was seriously good quality work. I did not feel that he was being unsafe. Doing some things I would say are not common here, but seemed 100% tool and wood aware. Interesting finishing method with the wiper glove.
Cabinetman":3vzuyihi said:….but would also say he had beautifully sharp tools.
As I mentioned Adrian, built with less precision, but well within the remit of a competent GCSE student; nothing particularly clever about mitred hidden tenons either. When I was teaching GCE ‘O’ Level woodwork in the early 80’s I had students tackle far more ambitious projects. I also used to moderate the exams in our local area which involved visiting schools to assess the students practical and design folder work, some of which was truly mind boggling, in particular from a private girls school where they could spend all the hours under the sun in the school workshop. My colleague Frank (who was especially pernickety, but the best metalwork teacher I ever came across) and I were simply gobsmacked on more than one occasion - RobAJB Temple":2ggwi8v9 said:Hmm. Personally I think this is well above the level of a GCSE student. Mitred hidden internal tenons, and very precise joints everywhere, is indicative of skill in my book. No bodges. Very sharp tools tend to result in few slips as minimal force is used. I enjoyed the video.
AJB Temple":leqnan9q said:That's 40 years ago Rob. School system and syllabus has changed markedly.![]()
Woodbloke":zup6ip8m said:Absolutely Adrian, and I doubt very much that a current GCSE ‘Technology’ student could produce anything like the sheer quality of work that Frank and I witnessed.
I was one of the last of the proper old skool woodwork teachers when I started in ‘79 and ‘woodwork’ as such was still on the timetable. In the early early 80’s it migrated to ‘Craft & Design’ so that by the end of the 80’s it was now ‘Craft, Design & Technology’ and had to comply with the National Curriculum, which was generally despised. During the 90’s it changed yet again to ‘Technology’ and woodwork as we used to know it had all but disappeared. I can’t remember the exact time frame but it went generally along those lines.Cabinetman":1wnb4p5s said:I was just trying to work out and couldn’t, when craft subjects stopped being taught the way they were, I think anybody trained under the old system and becoming a teacher will probably have retired by now? Ian
I am just a few years older than you I started teaching woodwork in 1976 or 7, and was very glad not to have to do it anymore after the first year! I think I would have murdered one of the little buggers.Woodbloke":3oooyvlg said:I was one of the last of the proper old skool woodwork teachers when I started in ‘79 and ‘woodwork’ as such was still on the timetable. In the early early 80’s it migrated to ‘Craft & Design’ so that by the end of the 80’s it was now ‘Craft, Design & Technology’ and had to comply with the National Curriculum, which was generally despised. During the 90’s it changed yet again to ‘Technology’ and woodwork as we used to know it had all but disappeared. I can’t remember the exact time frame but it went generally along those lines.Cabinetman":3oooyvlg said:I was just trying to work out and couldn’t, when craft subjects stopped being taught the way they were, I think anybody trained under the old system and becoming a teacher will probably have retired by now? Ian
I do remember vividly walking into my ‘shop one day where my then HoD was doing ‘sculptures’ with the kids using files, sandpaper etc. The only issue was that they were using mdf and the ‘shop was a complete fog of mdf dust in the air;:shock: this was long before it was realised how dangerous the stuff is. I distinctly remember taking one look inside and beating a very hasty retreat - Rob
Cabinetman":7jbbvj4s said:I am just a few years older than you I started teaching woodwork in 1976 or 7, and was very glad not to have to do it anymore after the first year! I think I would have murdered one of the little buggers.
Looking back we were trained almost as makers of furniture instead of woodwork teachers and totally unprepared for the changes that were to come, from your timescale it has been about 40 years since anybody was taught woodwork the way we were trained to teach it, so anyone under 50 won’t have been taught much, hence the strange questions we get asked.
What on earth are they going to do in 20 years time when we’ve all gone! Ian
Agreed Adrian; the private system can pretty much do as it pleases and in many cases the provision for a workshop based education is (and always was) much better than the State schools (which is where I taught)AJB Temple":2uf1xm2b said:By contrast, my eldest went to an academic prep school near where we lived and they had a proper D&T department and workshops. Being private sector the school had flexibility as to whom they appointed as teachers and the head recruited a South African man who had worked in various industries as an engineer. He was fully computer literate, had no problem with lathes, milling machines etc, and had no issues with hand tools. He did not have a teaching qualification and did not need one as he inspired the kids anyway. A couple of fathers helped out at times, one of whom presented TV programmes on inventions where he would personally do the fabrication. Forget his name. Had a superb large workshop at his house as well.
They also did (with different teachers) pottery, sculpture and metal casting.
It's perfectly possible to get this stuff right but we have substantially destroyed the vocational sector of schools in favour of, in very many cases, faux academic learning. Pretending that all kids can achieve academic success is daft, and in many cases sets up failure.
I went to a grammar school then fully bursary funded scholarship to a fee paying school. I could only do woodwork and metalwork briefly as it clashed with academic studies, but what teaching I did get as a young kid and you teenager was really great. It is a huge mistake for our education system to lose this - as it has.
AJB Temple":484nrwh4 said:It's perfectly possible to get this stuff right but we have substantially destroyed the vocational sector of schools in favour of, in very many cases, faux academic learning. Pretending that all kids can achieve academic success is daft, and in many cases sets up failure.
Cabinetman":3to2bj7z said:We have got off topic a lot, but do you agree? That when talking to anybody under the age of 30-40 you have to be very careful what you say?
AJB Temple":fnvq9sdh said:Cabinetman":fnvq9sdh said:We have got off topic a lot, but do you agree? That when talking to anybody under the age of 30-40 you have to be very careful what you say?
That has not really been my experience. When I had my last business most of the staff (circa 50) were between about 23 and 33. Slightly more women. Mix of races and nationalities typical of London City. Mostly I found them enlightened and open minded. But this did begin to change as over a period of about 10 years some of the new graduates and trainees coming in acted far more entitled and with a high opinion of themselves not justified by anything discernible.
But London is a funny place. We were a very equality minded business so maybe my experience is untypical.