It strikes me that when many houses have access to more than one TV and there is a national curriculum and a shortage of laptops, there are cheaper and, potentially, more effective, ways of delivering education than by ad-hoc provision by individual schools. By all means have local - and familiar - teachers available to review work and answer questions, but turning every classroom into a broadcast studio seems a curious approach for a government that is otherwise committed to centralising everything. They have had a year.