Rayhan Uddin

It may be news to Michael Gove and Toby Young, but politics happens outside the classroom

My secondary education was unusual. I attended a comprehensive school until I was sixteen, and then a grammar school for sixth form. The comprehensive was superior because, through the diversity of its pupils and the inventiveness and experience of its staff, it taught me to think critically. My grammar was just a crammer for exams. I found it narrowing. I wrote as much in the Guardian recently. My article received plenty of criticism, as you’d expect from such a divisive policy issue — nothing, it seems, fires people up like education. Among the reaction was this full-blown response from Toby Young in a recent issue of the Spectator.

Andrew Mitchell and me

In the summer of 2011 I was fortunate enough to land a one-week work experience placement with a government minister. It was Andrew Mitchell. It is no surprise, then, that I have been keeping a keen eye on the newspapers this past week as ‘Gategate’ continues to make the headlines. It only took a few conversations with the then International Development Secretary for me to realise that his compassionate approach towards aid was genuine. There were no cameras or microphones present as Mitchell told me of the desperate situation he had encountered the previous month in the drought-stricken Horn of Africa.