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British cabbies failing English exam?



 
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British cabbies failing English exam? #1 (permalink) Mon Jun 23, 2008 19:15 pm   British cabbies failing English exam?
 

I've just read an article about Laurence Kirk, a taxi driver from Bournemouth who was denied his taxi driver license because had to take a three hour GCSE English exam which he failed.

Here is a quote from the article:
Bournemouth is the first authority to insist on cab drivers taking a Business and Technical Education Council qualification in 'Transporting Passengers By Taxi and Private Hire'.

Steve Wright, principal licensing officer for the council, said the English exam was a way to evaluate the level of support the drivers will need to take the BTEC.

Source: DailyMail UK

So, what is your take on this?
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Torsten
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British cabbies failing English exam? #2 (permalink) Mon Jun 23, 2008 21:29 pm   British cabbies failing English exam?
 

Quote:
So, what is your take on this?

Where ya wanna go to, guv? I wonder just how many other "regular" Brits could pass such an exam?

More worrying:

Quote:
Chinese airlines have approximately 8,600 pilots flying international routes. Only 651 of them have passed the ICAO oral English exam.
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British cabbies failing English exam? #3 (permalink) Mon Jun 23, 2008 21:42 pm   British cabbies failing English exam?
 

Torsten wrote:
I've just read an article about Laurence Kirk, a taxi driver from Bournemouth who was denied his taxi driver license because had to take a three hour GCSE English exam which he failed.

They would all get an A* in their "Running the Country" GCSE, however.

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British cabbies failing English exam? #4 (permalink) Thu Jun 26, 2008 21:23 pm   British cabbies failing English exam?
 

Hmm, technically this story seems to put a bit of a spin on the facts. He wasn't denied a taxi license because he failed the English GCSE. He was denied it because he couldn't do a BTEC. The English GCSE is a requirement for doing any BTEC, as far as I know, so it's not specifically that taxi drivers need an English GCSE (though, that is the end result).

Complex issue, really.
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