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Britain Withdraws Advice on Getting Students Interested in Bombs

Are efforts to get students interested in science going too far?

LONDON, November 26 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - An official document advising British teachers that pupils could study how bombs are made as a way of stimulating interest in science lessons has been withdrawn, the Department for Education said Tuesday, November 26.

A spokeswoman for the Department for Education said: “As soon as it was seen the document was withdrawn straight away.”

The spokeswoman added the document was part of a teacher training pack, and not a handbook for use by pupils in the classroom.

The Times newspaper had reported Tuesday that “Children as young as 11 are being encouraged by the Government to show an interest in bomb-making.”

The U.K. newspaper said that the document told science teachers how to encourage students, suggesting that they could “use ball-bearings to make tilt switches for bombs.”

These switches, the paper added, are triggered by movement, and are believed to have been used on the Bali bombs, which killed more than 190 people last month.

Estelle Morris, the former Education Secretary, wrote a foreword to the document, in which she emphasizes the need for more children to take an interest in science, according to the paper.

Tilt switches are believed to have been used on the Bali bombs last month

In the foreword, Morris said “Science is diverse and exciting. It helps pupils to explore the world around them and understand so many things that have such relevance to daily life.”

Other suggestions in the document include testing gravestones and analyzing a “murder scene” to discover whether real blood is present, The Times reported.

“Visit a graveyard to look at weathering,” the document suggests.

“Investigate which type of rock makes the best gravestone by collecting data on the age of the gravestone, the type of rock and the degree of weathering. A tire gauge can help pupils to decide how much letters have been worn away and a dropper bottle of very dilute acid will help them to identify if the stone is marble or not.”

Another suggestion is “Murder mystery,” in which students are told to analyze evidence from “a crime scene and read statements from suspects to identify the murderer,” to “test pH of red mark to see if it’s real blood . . . match fingerprints and handwriting.”

Damien Green, the Conservative education spokesman said Monday, November 25, said the document “is certainly diverse and exciting for potential terrorists,” The Times reported.   

 

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