Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

News

WTF? The pro-formula science GCSE

90 replies

Longtalljosie · 23/07/2010 12:20

The above is not me being sad. That's me turning the air blue...

www.nct.org.uk/press-office/press-releases/view/224

OP posts:
BoysAreLikeDogs · 23/07/2010 12:22
Shock
StealthPolarBear · 23/07/2010 12:27
Shock
CharCharGabor · 23/07/2010 12:27

That's disgraceful.

TheButterflyEffect · 23/07/2010 12:30

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn

edam · 23/07/2010 12:34

Good grief! WTF was the exam board thinking? (Assuming they were thinking at all, that is...)

StealthPolarBear · 23/07/2010 12:39

TBE that quote was by the fictional charity leader

ItsAllGoingToBeFine · 23/07/2010 12:39

That is absolutely unbelievable !

Leaving the pro formula issue aside commercial companies should have no influence on education!

I am horrified

TheButterflyEffect · 23/07/2010 12:43

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn

AvrilHeytch · 23/07/2010 12:49

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn

StealthPolarBear · 23/07/2010 12:52

oh i see what you mean, sorry

onagar · 23/07/2010 13:09

I can see why people think this is a delicate subject and I suppose it depends on the intent. If someone got paid to add a bit about formula being good for babies that is an outrage. I want them taken out and shot.

On the other hand I see nothing wrong with what it says if it didn't have an agenda, but was just a made up example.

I have heard people say things like “so and so is a chemical and so it is a pollutant. Maybe not the head of a charity, but just post "I love giving my DCs fruitshoots" and watch what happens

The bit about saving babies from malnutrition is true if the mothers couldn't breastfeed.

TheButterflyEffect · 23/07/2010 13:12

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn

Morloth · 23/07/2010 13:53

Fucking hell.

Chil1234 · 23/07/2010 14:14

Are 15/16 year-old GCSE chemistry students the target market for formula then?

QueenOfFlamingEverything · 23/07/2010 14:20

Chil there is research that shows that girls are already decided on how they will feed their babies at a very young age, so this sort of thing is actually far more important than you might think.

needtomoveon · 23/07/2010 14:28

Anyone who has a baby, might have a relative who has a baby, might get a job working with babies, lives next door to someone with a baby err, pretty much anyone really is a target for pro-formula material. Teenagers are a good audience for this sort of shite propaganda, they are doing PSHE, they are forming opinions, they are

I am part and part . I wonder how much other stealth marketing goes on in exam papers. I don't believe private companies whose bottom line is commercial gain should have anything to do with the education of our children

PrettyCandles · 23/07/2010 14:30

The illustration that claims to be taken from a pCket of babyfood is completely irrelevant to the question. All it does is fix an unhelpful and untrue idea in an impressionable teenager's mind. As for the information in the subsequent box -

Onagar, the claim the f protects against malnutrition in the developing world is a blatant lie.

Formula is responsible for more infant illness, malnutrition and death than any other form of feeding. Why else do you suppose the WHO Code regarding formula exists?

needtomoveon · 23/07/2010 14:31

whoops. So cross I failed to finish a sentence. Teenagers are working out where they fit in the scheme of things particularly in regard to family issues and sexuality. .... is what I meant to say.

Chil1234 · 23/07/2010 14:46

It's a GCSE exam question everyone.... they never bore any relation to the real world and were always just a bunch of numbers dressed up in what the examiners think is a 'fun' way. They could have picked any manufactured product. Don't get all soap-box about it just because it's baby food rather than Pot Noodle that was selected.

Morloth · 23/07/2010 15:04

Bt it was baby food and not pot noodle, I wonder why?

MathsMadMummy · 23/07/2010 15:14

maybe it's part of this "let's be soft and not risk upsetting the girls who have already decided they will FF" thing.

like if a PG woman is asked if she'll BF and she says no, even MWs/HVs nowadays feel they don't have the right to question it or even suggest giving BF a try.

FWIW I agree to some extent that it is only a GCSE question and they are always made-up mumbo jumbo... but then they could've done it about ANYTHING, so it seems really silly to do it about something so emotive especially if they're going to get the info wrong!

Chil1234 · 23/07/2010 15:30

Examiners have various abstract topics to weave into a paper around which they have to build a reasonably 'real-life' sounding question without repeating themselves too often. Chances are that - rather than cynical corporate sponsorship - one of the people setting the exam has just had a baby - and at 2am when they were scooping out the SMA thought 'this would be a good way to illustrate subject X'

PrettyCandles · 23/07/2010 15:55

"My Baby Food is recommended as being the closest to a mother?s own breast milk. It is given free to mothers in the developing world ? without it their babies might die of malnutrition."

This is a blatant plug for formula, presented to a very impressionable audience. An audience to whom it is illegal and unethical to advertise formula.

Similarly the 'label' stating that the baby milk was "Pure and natural" and "Closest to mothers' breastmilk" is an illegal plug for formula.

"The group was founded by Mrs I. M. Right who has made a career in ?goodness? and is paid from donations given to RMAU by members of the public"

This is a dig at the charities that promote breastfeeding as a natural and good form of nutrition.

None of these sections are at all necessary or relevant to the exam question.

It would have been mildly contentious without them. With them it is dishonest, unethical, and, frankly, disgusting.

frasersmummy · 23/07/2010 16:03

och I'm sure if you go through the last 10 years exam papers you will find all sorts of rubbish about all sorts of products

The kids are too busy thinking of the answer to worry about ff versus bf..

Shallishanti · 23/07/2010 16:04

It's the science yeachers who should be responding to this.
I'm not a science teacher but AFAIK science curriculum is supposed to cover social and ethical aspects of science