Four members of my family died in WW1, including my maternal grandfather. We are already planning a family visit to northern France in 2015, the centenary of the year three of them died. My DGC, who will be 8 and 5 will learn about the war and their family's sacrifice in a quiet reflective family situation. Much better than in a school junket to France.
I hope the BBC will re-run the long series on WW1 that it made in the 1960s. I recently bought it and watched it - and found it compulsive watching. Also the 1980s serialisation of Testament of Youth, Vera Brittain's (Shirley Williams mother) story of her service in the VAD and the loss of her only brother, fiancee, and two close male friends. There are other television programmes that could be rerun, Oh What a Lovely War, Journey's End, Blackadder etc.
What I would like to see is a long and thoughtful look at what the war did to our society, the generation of children who grew up without fathers, the women, married and unmarried, without husbands and the loss of so many brilliant and gifted young men, like Wilfred Owen, Rupert Brooke etc, whose lives were truncated so young.
Nothing I have mentioned would require money. Cameron's plans are just political posing and mishmash photo opportunity education and commemoration..