You said
Quoting Ben Reilly from 16:50, 11th May 2006 put forward a collective view
not
Quoting Ben Reilly from 16:54, 11th May 2006 the collective
A collective view surely is a few people with that particular view
Quoting Ben Reilly from 16:50, 11th May 2006 put forward a collective view
Quoting Ben Reilly from 16:54, 11th May 2006 the collective
Quoting Laura from 16:56, 11th May 2006
There have been lots of times when SRC members have come to a meeting and have been specifically asked by a student to ask about a worry or a grievance..
often we find it hard to understand how students really feel and I am yet to be convinced that the SRC has ever had an effective way of collating evidence for a collective view.
Quoting Ben Reilly from 16:26, 11th May 2006
Either that or find somebody else who feels as strongly as he does about this to come along.
Quoting Ben Reilly from 17:03, 11th May 2006Quoting Laura from 16:56, 11th May 2006
There have been lots of times when SRC members have come to a meeting and have been specifically asked by a student to ask about a worry or a grievance..
I'm sure they have. But that does not mean it is an effective way of doing something.
Quoting A66 from 16:57, 11th May 2006
To be pedantic (as that is what the sinner is for)
You saidQuoting Ben Reilly from 16:50, 11th May 2006 put forward a collective view
notQuoting Ben Reilly from 16:54, 11th May 2006 the collective
A collective view surely is a few people with that particular view
Quoting Ben Reilly from 17:03, 11th May 2006Quoting Laura from 16:56, 11th May 2006
Very true. It's amazing that we have so many posts that are supposed to be about representing specific interest groups then, isn't it? But at the same time, if we believe in a representative system of governance, then by the very definition, the collective view of the students should be the collective view of the SRC.
Quoting Laura from 17:02, 11th May 2006
I also think if something arises on a board like this whether it be six people saying it or sixty it is worth being brought forward for debate at SRC. By asking a representative to mention a problem you find with something you are not necessarily asking them to champion it, more to raise it as an issue that students find a problem with.
Are we saying we on the SRC are only prepared to mention a case or state that there is student feeling regarding something if we ourselves are behind it?
Quoting Dave the Explosive Newt from 17:05, 11th May 2006
Does this mean that grievances raised should be ignored out of hand? I'd say that any representative should be proactive in seeking out the views of the people they represent (whatever form they be raised in) if the representative system is to be effective.
Quoting Ben Reilly from 17:09, 11th May 2006
.
My issue was that this is something that would appear to need a champion.
You never made that clear before- but even now you are doing, I don't agree. It just needs someone to raise it. It was posted, there's been a backlash, and I think you have a duty to raise it. But that is up to you whether you do.As you said, there is a difference between being a champion and saying some people think it's an issue.
So I trust you will be mentioning that people think it is an issue.As I said in my first post on this thread "If people disagree with what was said, they should come along to SRC tonight (7.30, Committee Room) and make their case."
This is not about saying some students find issue with what has been said, it's about making representative accountable for what they said. In this case, to the people they represent, members of the student body.
Quoting Dave the Explosive Newt from 17:02, 11th May 2006
Piffle, Ben. I'd say that judging from this thread there is a reasonable concern that
a) That email was unecessarily heavy handed in tone and may have been inaccurate to the point of scaremongering
b) that it was vague about what and what did not constitute acceptable behaviour
c) that it was only sent to final-year students when many of those taking part will come from other years.
I'd hope that any member of the SRC reading this thread would have picked these up as legitimate concerns and be able to put them forward.
Quoting Ben Reilly from 17:09, 11th May 2006
.
My issue was that this is something that would appear to need a champion.
You never made that clear before- but even now you are doing, I don't agree. It just needs someone to raise it. It was posted, there's been a backlash, and I think you have a duty to raise it. But that is up to you whether you do.As you said, there is a difference between being a champion and saying some people think it's an issue.
So I trust you will be mentioning that people think it is an issue.As I said in my first post on this thread "If people disagree with what was said, they should come along to SRC tonight (7.30, Committee Room) and make their case."
This is not about saying some students find issue with what has been said, it's about making representative accountable for what they said. In this case, to the people they represent, members of the student body.
Quoting Laura from 17:08, 11th May 2006
Ben, by your own admission you don't have a way of finding the collective view. If your going to blame it on the system, then as always, I am exasperated.
I dislike the system as much as you, but you have failed to do anything about it in two years so I really don't know what to suggest to you.
If one student comes to your office and has a problem, and wants you to raise it at SRC you should do so for discussion. This is no different. I just don't agree with you. But I doubt getting into a big debate here is a good idea.
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