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			 NWAS "SHOCKED" AT
			'SHOCTOBER' SUCCESS  | 
		 
	 
	
	  
	THE North West Ambulance Service's 
	social media sites have gone into meltdown since launching its 
	'Shoctober' campaign on 1 October 2015. 
	 
	The campaign's hashtag #findthedefib has been 'tweeted' over 
	2,000 times and the Trust received details of more than 250 defibrillator 
	locations which are being checked against its records, to ensure 999 callers 
	can be directed to the nearest one in the event of a cardiac arrest. 
	 
	MPs, schools, gyms, youth groups, Fire Services, Police Officers, sports 
	teams, the AA, supermarkets and business owners have all risen to the 
	challenge to find the defib and their efforts are showing no signs of 
	slowing down as the campaign continues throughout October 2015. 
	 
	NWAS Community Engagement Manager, Andy Redgrave comments:- "We 
	thought we may get a few pictures of forgotten defibrillators but we never 
	imagined the response from the public would be so great. In the first week 
	alone we learnt of least 40 defibrillator locations that we weren't aware of 
	previously, we're currently checking the others we have been told about so 
	as the month goes on, we hope to increase this further. The Trust is 
	extremely grateful for the support shown by the public, we've even had 
	pictures from Florida, Hong Kong, Spain and Amsterdam! It's heartening to 
	learn that all these people know the importance of having a defibrillator in 
	public places. A cardiac arrest can happen to anyone; young or old, at any 
	time and the use of a defibrillator within the 1st few minutes, while help 
	is on the way, can improve the chances of survival by up to 70%. Please keep 
	those selfies coming. In some way, everyone who sends us a picture with 
	location details is contributing to saving the life of someone in their 
	community." 
	 
	It's estimated that there are thousands of these life saving portable 
	machines in the North West which NWAS doesn't know about so if someone 
	calls:- 999 in the event of a cardiac arrest, the Trust can't direct them to 
	the nearest 1.  
	 
	AEDs are small machines which can 'shock' a person's heart 
	into restarting. They are easy to use, easy to carry and as they talks 
	through the process, they won't deliver a shoc unless it is required. There 
	is no clinical training required to be able to use the machine. Last year, 
	the Trust attended 13,636 suspected cardiac arrest incidents in the region 
	and this number increases year on year. 
	 
	The Trust knows that many large business such as hotel chains, factories, 
	shopping centres and smaller organisations such as social and sports clubs 
	raise funds and install AEDs and is asking the public to 'find the defib' 
	and let NWAS know.  
	 
	The location of AEDs can sometimes be marked with a sign showing a white 
	heart on a green background, or they could just be mounted on a wall behind 
	bars, in corridors, gyms, leisure centres, offices, tourist attractions, 
	schools, colleges, restaurants, coffee shops; anywhere at all! 
	 
	If you see one, take a selfie with it and you can either tweet the photo via 
	@NWambulance using the hashtag #findthedefib, giving as much information as 
	possible regarding its location. Or, send the photo via North West Ambulance 
	Service's Facebook page or email:- 
	
	nwasenquiries@nwas.nhs.uk if you don't want to send a photo, 
	just mail the location details and NWAS will make sure the device is logged 
	on the system and ready to use in the event of an emergency. 
	 
	Cardiac Arrest Attendances per county covered by NWAS 2014/15:- 
	 
	Cheshire - 2,127 
	Cumbria - 883 
	Lancashire - 2,762 
	Merseyside - 2,376 
	Greater Manchester - 5,488 
	
	 
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	 Schools 'need a moral purpose 
	beyond exam results' 
	SCHOOLS are failing to set out a 
	coherent moral purpose for their pupils beyond the achievement of good 
	grades, academics from Edge Hill University claim.  Professor Tim Cain, 
	Helena Knapton, Jill McKenzie and Dr Damien Shortt, speaking at a British 
	Education Research Association conference, said that education institutions 
	should be setting goals for the type of people they want their pupils to 
	become. Virtues such as curiosity, critical thinking and respect for 
	evidence should be the overall objectives, with good academic results then 
	seen as consequences of these aims, rather than the defining mission. 
	Instead, schools are presenting other possible outcomes of a good education 
	as important only in so far as they help pupils do well in exams. This may 
	leave them open to movements which seek to offer an alternative, more 
	explicitly moral, vision, such as the alleged attempted:- 'Trojan 
	Horse' takeover of schools in Birmingham, it is claimed. The 
	argument is set out in a paper drawing on evidence from statements on 
	secondary school websites which set out the justifications the schools use 
	in seeking to convince pupils to behave well in class. 
	 
	The academics analysed the behaviour policies of a representative sample of 
	36 English secondary schools. They found that 34 of these provided 
	statements as to why pupils should behave well in class. Of these, all 34 
	offered the reason that pupils needed to behave in order to support their 
	own, or fellow pupils', "learning and academic achievement." 
	 
	The researchers found that:- "A causal link between behaviour and 
	learning was explicitly made in most of the schools' behaviour management 
	policies; indeed some of the policies were explicitly labelled 'behaviour 
	for learning policies', and 1 school entitled its entire behaviour policy 
	the 'Ready for Learning Policy'." 
	 
	The research team acknowledge that the concept that pupils needed to behave 
	well in order to do well in their studies sounds persuasive. But it has 
	flaws, they argue. These include that a drive for good behaviour among 
	pupils may emphasise qualities such as compliance and a willingness to 
	follow orders, when in reality the best learning draws on other 
	characteristics, such as being curious and questioning.  Others include 
	the fact that not all pupils who behave well will, in reality, go on to 
	achieve well; and that a behaviour policy founded on the argument that good 
	behaviour supports achievement in exams will fail to offer a reason as to 
	why young people should continue to behave well as adults.  This means, 
	say the researchers, that:- "the majority of [school] behaviour 
	management policies are unlikely to succeed in their stated aims". 
	Instead, they argue that schools should have as their overall goals the 
	development of 'virtues' associated with mastering particular 
	subjects: coherence of thought, respect for evidence and an "attitude 
	of principled critique" of arguments. These would both be 
	transferrable between subjects and useful in later life. Good academic 
	results would be achieved as a side effect of these aims, rather than being 
	the schools' overall objective. 
	 
	The team concluded:- "From our analysis of schools' behaviour 
	management policies, it appears as though schools consistently miss the 
	opportunity to 1st establish a coherent and convincing narrative from which 
	they can determine the required virtues. Such a narrative would, in our 
	view, stand a much better chance of success because it will establish exam 
	grades as almost as a side effect by those who have been properly inducted 
	into the role of the school pupil. What, in many ways, provided the 
	opportunity for a hostile ideological takeover of schools was the absence of 
	a coherent moral narrative that articulated the school's position and goals. 
	If it is our desire, as a society, to establish a form of secular education 
	that is not divorced from all moral statements through its conscious and 
	political disassociation from all flavours of religion, then an excellent 
	place to start would be with the virtues of inquiry" as described 
	above, argues the paper presented to BERA. 
	 
	Why be good? Axiological foundations for behaviour management policies in 36 
	secondary schools in England was presented to BERA by Professor Tim Cain, 
	Helena Knapton, Jill McKenzie and Dr Damien Shortt, all of Edge Hill 
	University, in September 2015. 
			
	Charity Bowls Match at 
	Crosby Pub 
	
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	FOLLOWING on from the success in 
	2014, the 2nd Annual Nags Head versus Sefton and Thornton Bowls Club bowls 
	match was held, on Saturday, 19 September 2015, with 2 local charities 
	benefitting from funds that were raised.  The match took place at the 
	Hungry Horse pub on Green Lane, with staff members taking on their more 
	skilled regulars. Last year the members of the bowls club were kind enough 
	to use their weaker hands but there was no levelling of the playing field 
	this time around as they showed the pub team exactly how it is done and were 
	convincing winners. As well as the bowls match, a raffle was held and nearly 
	£500 was raised in total, which will be split evenly between the Sefton 
	Women's and Children's Aid and Riding for the Disabled. Dave Ogley, manager 
	of the Nags Head, said:- "Everyone had a lot of fun playing in the 
	bowls match and it was great that we were able to raise money for 2 great 
	charities. You would have thought that playing last year would have helped 
	make us slightly better players but apparently not, we were still rubbish! 
	However, we put up a decent enough fight and the players from the bowls club 
	knew that we would be the ones serving them after the match so they did not 
	rub it in!"  |