Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
More Annotations

Hatton Jewellers - Fine Jewellery & Watches - New, Used & Vintage
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?

Domotica En Casa - Domótica en Casa
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?

WPSHARE - قالب Ùˆ Ø§ÙØ²ÙˆÙ†Ù‡ های وردپرس
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?

mail.co.uk - Free e-mail for the United Kingdom
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?

Online Store - eCommerce Website Building Software - GoDaddy
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?

Prophotos.ru. Журнал о фотографии и фототехнике â„–1 в РоÑÑии.
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Favourite Annotations

UPSC IAS EXAM PREPARATION - INSIGHTS IAS
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?

Kilohana Kauai – Kauai`s Legendary Plantation Estate
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?

Bienvenue sur Pharmacie.be - Pharmacie.be
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?

ШтормÐвто - шины и диÑки
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?

Полезные Ñоветы на вÑе Ñлучаи жизни - SovetOK
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?

Football - l`actualité foot et transfert est sur MAXIFOOT
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?

Dólar hoy, Cotización del dólar, precio del dolar - Dolarhoy.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Text
January.
COVID VACCINE: MPS RAISE CONCERNS ABOUT WHETHER UNIVERSITY MPs have raised concerns about whether international and UK students will get the right vaccines this summer at the right time. They said the Government needed to “urgently” set out plans for how it would bring foreign students safely to the UK in September. THE IMPORTANCE OF BLACK HISTORY Teachers share their experiences as Wales makes black history a mandatory part of the curriculum. The new curriculum in Wales will make black history a mandatory part of education. It is the first of the four nations to take this step. But what does it mean in practice, and why is this such a THE SIX COMMON COMPONENTS OF GOOD-QUALITY TEACHING The research we reviewed suggests there are six common components that are signatures of good-quality teaching: Content knowledge This is when teachers have a deep knowledge of the subject that they teach and can communicate content effectively to their students. We found strong evidence for the impact of this on student outcomes. COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
CLASS SIZE AND STAFFING IN SPECIAL SCHOOLS Class Size and Staffing in Special Schools. On the NUT website Kevin Courtney, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said: “School funding per pupil is falling at its fastest rate since the 1970s. Support for students with special educational needs has been, or is expected to be, reduced in their schools. REMOTE LEARNING INCREASES WORKLOAD, SAY 86% OF TEACHERS Remote learning increases workload, say 86% of teachers. Tes reports . Workload has “increased greatly” since remote learning was implemented, according to 45 per cent of the representative sample of 1,003 teachers responding to the YouGov poll. And the results published today showed that another 41 per cent said their workloadhad
SHOULD WHISTLEBLOWING TEACHERS BE GIVEN MORE PROTECTION Writing in the Guardian, Louise Tickle says teachers who report evidence of child abuse can all too often end up losing their job. Now, she says, campaigners are calling for better safeguards.. FORMER NATIONAL BALLET STAR GUILTY OF SEXUALLY ABUSING Former National Ballet star guilty of sexually abusing young students. Metro reports . Yat-Sen Chang, 49, groomed and intimidated his victims, all between the ages of 16 and 18. He inappropriately touched young girls during massages for six years and three months. His victims were ‘children whom he had been trusted to teach’ at the LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NET Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across GAVIN WILLIAMSON URGES ALL PUPILS AND THEIR FAMILIES TO The UK Education Secretary has urged students and their families to take a coronavirus test ahead of the return to classrooms next week, following the half-term break. The Government praised the “herculean efforts” of students and staff after more than 50 million rapid tests have been taken in schools and colleges across England sinceJanuary.
COVID VACCINE: MPS RAISE CONCERNS ABOUT WHETHER UNIVERSITY MPs have raised concerns about whether international and UK students will get the right vaccines this summer at the right time. They said the Government needed to “urgently” set out plans for how it would bring foreign students safely to the UK in September. THE IMPORTANCE OF BLACK HISTORY Teachers share their experiences as Wales makes black history a mandatory part of the curriculum. The new curriculum in Wales will make black history a mandatory part of education. It is the first of the four nations to take this step. But what does it mean in practice, and why is this such a THE SIX COMMON COMPONENTS OF GOOD-QUALITY TEACHING The research we reviewed suggests there are six common components that are signatures of good-quality teaching: Content knowledge This is when teachers have a deep knowledge of the subject that they teach and can communicate content effectively to their students. We found strong evidence for the impact of this on student outcomes. COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
CLASS SIZE AND STAFFING IN SPECIAL SCHOOLS Class Size and Staffing in Special Schools. On the NUT website Kevin Courtney, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said: “School funding per pupil is falling at its fastest rate since the 1970s. Support for students with special educational needs has been, or is expected to be, reduced in their schools. REMOTE LEARNING INCREASES WORKLOAD, SAY 86% OF TEACHERS Remote learning increases workload, say 86% of teachers. Tes reports . Workload has “increased greatly” since remote learning was implemented, according to 45 per cent of the representative sample of 1,003 teachers responding to the YouGov poll. And the results published today showed that another 41 per cent said their workloadhad
SHOULD WHISTLEBLOWING TEACHERS BE GIVEN MORE PROTECTION Writing in the Guardian, Louise Tickle says teachers who report evidence of child abuse can all too often end up losing their job. Now, she says, campaigners are calling for better safeguards.. FORMER NATIONAL BALLET STAR GUILTY OF SEXUALLY ABUSING Former National Ballet star guilty of sexually abusing young students. Metro reports . Yat-Sen Chang, 49, groomed and intimidated his victims, all between the ages of 16 and 18. He inappropriately touched young girls during massages for six years and three months. His victims were ‘children whom he had been trusted to teach’ at the NEW ‘LEAD TEACHER’ POSTS TO BE INTRODUCED IN AUGUST The new post of “lead teacher” will be introduced in Scotland from August, it was confirmed at the EIS teaching union's annual general meeting this morning. The idea behind the new role – which will command a salary of over £47,000 a year – is to provide a promotion route for teachers who want to further their careers, but who do not want to move into school management. 'CANNABIS SWEETS': NI SCHOOLS ISSUE WARNING TO PARENTS Schools in NI have been asked to warn parents and staff about pupils eating cannabis oil disguised as sweets. The Department of Education (DE) said a young child had to be assessed in hospital after they 'inadvertently consumed cannabis' when eating the sweets. COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
WILLIAMSON’S INVOLVEMENT IN QUEEN PAINTING ROW ‘POSES Gavin Williamson’s response to Oxford University students removing a painting of the Queen “poses questions” over the government’s commitment to free speech, according to the National University of Students (NUS). The move sparked backlash from the STILL UNCLEAR WHETHER TEENAGERS NEED A COVID-19 JAB It is not yet clear whether children aged 12 and over should get the Coivd-19 vaccine, a member of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) has said. Professor Adam Finn, who is part of the body that advises the Government on vaccines. FRESH CALL FOR CUTS TO CLASS SIZES AND CONTACT TIME A move will be made this week to reduce class sizes in Scotland to 20 while also cutting teachers' class-contact time to 20 hours, as part of a nine-year 'incremental' plan that would be fully realised in 2030. The proposal is part of a motion going to the first annual general meeting of the EIS, Scotland's largest teaching union, since the Covid crisis began. GENDER NEUTRAL TOILETS COULD BE PUT IN COUNTY’S SCHOOLS TO Unisex toilets could soon be installed in schools across East Sussex to help transgender pupils feel more comfortable. It follows a consultation with trans children which revealed that many will choose gender-neutral toilets ‘for fear of bullying or harassment’. FREE SCHOOL MEALS ANNOUNCED FOR 90,000 MORE PUPILS Holyrood will deliver on the SNP's manifesto pledge to give free school meals to pupils in primary four and five, no matter how much their families earn More than 90,000 children in Scotland will be entitled to free school meals by January 2022, the education secretary has announced, regardless of their background. GUEST POST: THE USE OF REWARD SYSTEMS IN SCHOOLS The Merrett sisters conclude, “A number of factors increase the efficacy of reward systems. These include: consistent delivery, perceived fairness of reward distribution, prompt recognition for behaviour, regular and frequent small rewards, sense of community and belonging, providing choices in the rewards available, and the use oftechnology
OCKBROOK SCHOOL: ONE OF THE UK'S OLDEST BOARDING SCHOOLS BBC reports . One of the UK’s oldest boarding schools has announced it will close next month after running out of money. Ockbrook School in Derbyshire, founded in 1799, said it remained “significantly loss-making”, a situation made worse by the pandemic. LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NET Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across GAVIN WILLIAMSON URGES ALL PUPILS AND THEIR FAMILIES TO The UK Education Secretary has urged students and their families to take a coronavirus test ahead of the return to classrooms next week, following the half-term break. The Government praised the “herculean efforts” of students and staff after more than 50 million rapid tests have been taken in schools and colleges across England sinceJanuary.
COVID VACCINE: MPS RAISE CONCERNS ABOUT WHETHER UNIVERSITY MPs have raised concerns about whether international and UK students will get the right vaccines this summer at the right time. They said the Government needed to “urgently” set out plans for how it would bring foreign students safely to the UK in September. THE IMPORTANCE OF BLACK HISTORY Teachers share their experiences as Wales makes black history a mandatory part of the curriculum. The new curriculum in Wales will make black history a mandatory part of education. It is the first of the four nations to take this step. But what does it mean in practice, and why is this such a THE SIX COMMON COMPONENTS OF GOOD-QUALITY TEACHING The research we reviewed suggests there are six common components that are signatures of good-quality teaching: Content knowledge This is when teachers have a deep knowledge of the subject that they teach and can communicate content effectively to their students. We found strong evidence for the impact of this on student outcomes. COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
CLASS SIZE AND STAFFING IN SPECIAL SCHOOLS Class Size and Staffing in Special Schools. On the NUT website Kevin Courtney, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said: “School funding per pupil is falling at its fastest rate since the 1970s. Support for students with special educational needs has been, or is expected to be, reduced in their schools. REMOTE LEARNING INCREASES WORKLOAD, SAY 86% OF TEACHERS Remote learning increases workload, say 86% of teachers. Tes reports . Workload has “increased greatly” since remote learning was implemented, according to 45 per cent of the representative sample of 1,003 teachers responding to the YouGov poll. And the results published today showed that another 41 per cent said their workloadhad
SHOULD WHISTLEBLOWING TEACHERS BE GIVEN MORE PROTECTION Writing in the Guardian, Louise Tickle says teachers who report evidence of child abuse can all too often end up losing their job. Now, she says, campaigners are calling for better safeguards.. FORMER NATIONAL BALLET STAR GUILTY OF SEXUALLY ABUSING Former National Ballet star guilty of sexually abusing young students. Metro reports . Yat-Sen Chang, 49, groomed and intimidated his victims, all between the ages of 16 and 18. He inappropriately touched young girls during massages for six years and three months. His victims were ‘children whom he had been trusted to teach’ at the LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NET Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across GAVIN WILLIAMSON URGES ALL PUPILS AND THEIR FAMILIES TO The UK Education Secretary has urged students and their families to take a coronavirus test ahead of the return to classrooms next week, following the half-term break. The Government praised the “herculean efforts” of students and staff after more than 50 million rapid tests have been taken in schools and colleges across England sinceJanuary.
COVID VACCINE: MPS RAISE CONCERNS ABOUT WHETHER UNIVERSITY MPs have raised concerns about whether international and UK students will get the right vaccines this summer at the right time. They said the Government needed to “urgently” set out plans for how it would bring foreign students safely to the UK in September. THE IMPORTANCE OF BLACK HISTORY Teachers share their experiences as Wales makes black history a mandatory part of the curriculum. The new curriculum in Wales will make black history a mandatory part of education. It is the first of the four nations to take this step. But what does it mean in practice, and why is this such a THE SIX COMMON COMPONENTS OF GOOD-QUALITY TEACHING The research we reviewed suggests there are six common components that are signatures of good-quality teaching: Content knowledge This is when teachers have a deep knowledge of the subject that they teach and can communicate content effectively to their students. We found strong evidence for the impact of this on student outcomes. COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
CLASS SIZE AND STAFFING IN SPECIAL SCHOOLS Class Size and Staffing in Special Schools. On the NUT website Kevin Courtney, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said: “School funding per pupil is falling at its fastest rate since the 1970s. Support for students with special educational needs has been, or is expected to be, reduced in their schools. REMOTE LEARNING INCREASES WORKLOAD, SAY 86% OF TEACHERS Remote learning increases workload, say 86% of teachers. Tes reports . Workload has “increased greatly” since remote learning was implemented, according to 45 per cent of the representative sample of 1,003 teachers responding to the YouGov poll. And the results published today showed that another 41 per cent said their workloadhad
SHOULD WHISTLEBLOWING TEACHERS BE GIVEN MORE PROTECTION Writing in the Guardian, Louise Tickle says teachers who report evidence of child abuse can all too often end up losing their job. Now, she says, campaigners are calling for better safeguards.. FORMER NATIONAL BALLET STAR GUILTY OF SEXUALLY ABUSING Former National Ballet star guilty of sexually abusing young students. Metro reports . Yat-Sen Chang, 49, groomed and intimidated his victims, all between the ages of 16 and 18. He inappropriately touched young girls during massages for six years and three months. His victims were ‘children whom he had been trusted to teach’ at the NEW ‘LEAD TEACHER’ POSTS TO BE INTRODUCED IN AUGUST The new post of “lead teacher” will be introduced in Scotland from August, it was confirmed at the EIS teaching union's annual general meeting this morning. The idea behind the new role – which will command a salary of over £47,000 a year – is to provide a promotion route for teachers who want to further their careers, but who do not want to move into school management. 'CANNABIS SWEETS': NI SCHOOLS ISSUE WARNING TO PARENTS Schools in NI have been asked to warn parents and staff about pupils eating cannabis oil disguised as sweets. The Department of Education (DE) said a young child had to be assessed in hospital after they 'inadvertently consumed cannabis' when eating the sweets. COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
WILLIAMSON’S INVOLVEMENT IN QUEEN PAINTING ROW ‘POSES Gavin Williamson’s response to Oxford University students removing a painting of the Queen “poses questions” over the government’s commitment to free speech, according to the National University of Students (NUS). The move sparked backlash from the STILL UNCLEAR WHETHER TEENAGERS NEED A COVID-19 JAB It is not yet clear whether children aged 12 and over should get the Coivd-19 vaccine, a member of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) has said. Professor Adam Finn, who is part of the body that advises the Government on vaccines. FRESH CALL FOR CUTS TO CLASS SIZES AND CONTACT TIME A move will be made this week to reduce class sizes in Scotland to 20 while also cutting teachers' class-contact time to 20 hours, as part of a nine-year 'incremental' plan that would be fully realised in 2030. The proposal is part of a motion going to the first annual general meeting of the EIS, Scotland's largest teaching union, since the Covid crisis began. GENDER NEUTRAL TOILETS COULD BE PUT IN COUNTY’S SCHOOLS TO Unisex toilets could soon be installed in schools across East Sussex to help transgender pupils feel more comfortable. It follows a consultation with trans children which revealed that many will choose gender-neutral toilets ‘for fear of bullying or harassment’. FREE SCHOOL MEALS ANNOUNCED FOR 90,000 MORE PUPILS Holyrood will deliver on the SNP's manifesto pledge to give free school meals to pupils in primary four and five, no matter how much their families earn More than 90,000 children in Scotland will be entitled to free school meals by January 2022, the education secretary has announced, regardless of their background. GUEST POST: THE USE OF REWARD SYSTEMS IN SCHOOLS The Merrett sisters conclude, “A number of factors increase the efficacy of reward systems. These include: consistent delivery, perceived fairness of reward distribution, prompt recognition for behaviour, regular and frequent small rewards, sense of community and belonging, providing choices in the rewards available, and the use oftechnology
OCKBROOK SCHOOL: ONE OF THE UK'S OLDEST BOARDING SCHOOLS BBC reports . One of the UK’s oldest boarding schools has announced it will close next month after running out of money. Ockbrook School in Derbyshire, founded in 1799, said it remained “significantly loss-making”, a situation made worse by the pandemic. LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NET Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across ORAL EXAM DROPPED FROM LANGUAGE GCSES AND A-LEVELS FOR Pupils will not be tested on how they can speak French, Irish, German or Spanish to gain GCSEs, AS or A-levels in the languages in 2022. Northern Ireland exams board CCEA has dropped the 'speaking' units from all language qualifications. It means pupils will only be examined on listening to, reading and writing the language they arestudying.
COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
THE SIX COMMON COMPONENTS OF GOOD-QUALITY TEACHING The research we reviewed suggests there are six common components that are signatures of good-quality teaching: Content knowledge This is when teachers have a deep knowledge of the subject that they teach and can communicate content effectively to their students. We found strong evidence for the impact of this on student outcomes. REMOTE LEARNING INCREASES WORKLOAD, SAY 86% OF TEACHERS Remote learning increases workload, say 86% of teachers. Tes reports . Workload has “increased greatly” since remote learning was implemented, according to 45 per cent of the representative sample of 1,003 teachers responding to the YouGov poll. And the results published today showed that another 41 per cent said their workloadhad
SHOULD WHISTLEBLOWING TEACHERS BE GIVEN MORE PROTECTION Writing in the Guardian, Louise Tickle says teachers who report evidence of child abuse can all too often end up losing their job. Now, she says, campaigners are calling for better safeguards.. CLASS SIZE AND STAFFING IN SPECIAL SCHOOLS Class Size and Staffing in Special Schools. On the NUT website Kevin Courtney, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said: “School funding per pupil is falling at its fastest rate since the 1970s. Support for students with special educational needs has been, or is expected to be, reduced in their schools. FUNDING FOR PUPILS WITH SPECIAL EDUCATIONAL NEEDS DROPS 17 The government has been accused of failing children with special educational needs after a report found funding for pupils had been cut by 17% across England since 2015. The Guardian reports.The report by the thinktank IPPR North also revealed the north had been worst affected, with cuts of 22% per pupil. Researchers found government spending on support for children and young people ONE IN FOUR 15-YEAR-OLDS HAVE A READING AGE OF 12 OR BELOW According to Daily Mail, a quarter of all 15-year-olds have a reading age of twelve or below which puts them at a ‘disadvantage’ in their GCSEs, new research shows. They will struggle to understand questions in English language and even subjects such as science and maths, which have become increasingly ‘text heavy’.Test provider, GL Assessment, analysed the reading abilities of more PRIVATE SCHOOLS SHOULD 'PHASE OUT' MERIT BASED The Telegraph is reporting that private schools should stop trying to compete for the best students by luring them with scholarships and instead spend the money on bursaries, a leading headmistress has said.Emma Hattersley, head at the £32,000-a-year Godolphin School in Salisbury, said that scholarships for exceptionally talented pupils should be “phased out” in favour of fee assistance LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NET Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across ORAL EXAM DROPPED FROM LANGUAGE GCSES AND A-LEVELS FOR Pupils will not be tested on how they can speak French, Irish, German or Spanish to gain GCSEs, AS or A-levels in the languages in 2022. Northern Ireland exams board CCEA has dropped the 'speaking' units from all language qualifications. It means pupils will only be examined on listening to, reading and writing the language they arestudying.
COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
THE SIX COMMON COMPONENTS OF GOOD-QUALITY TEACHING The research we reviewed suggests there are six common components that are signatures of good-quality teaching: Content knowledge This is when teachers have a deep knowledge of the subject that they teach and can communicate content effectively to their students. We found strong evidence for the impact of this on student outcomes. REMOTE LEARNING INCREASES WORKLOAD, SAY 86% OF TEACHERS Remote learning increases workload, say 86% of teachers. Tes reports . Workload has “increased greatly” since remote learning was implemented, according to 45 per cent of the representative sample of 1,003 teachers responding to the YouGov poll. And the results published today showed that another 41 per cent said their workloadhad
SHOULD WHISTLEBLOWING TEACHERS BE GIVEN MORE PROTECTION Writing in the Guardian, Louise Tickle says teachers who report evidence of child abuse can all too often end up losing their job. Now, she says, campaigners are calling for better safeguards.. CLASS SIZE AND STAFFING IN SPECIAL SCHOOLS Class Size and Staffing in Special Schools. On the NUT website Kevin Courtney, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said: “School funding per pupil is falling at its fastest rate since the 1970s. Support for students with special educational needs has been, or is expected to be, reduced in their schools. FUNDING FOR PUPILS WITH SPECIAL EDUCATIONAL NEEDS DROPS 17 The government has been accused of failing children with special educational needs after a report found funding for pupils had been cut by 17% across England since 2015. The Guardian reports.The report by the thinktank IPPR North also revealed the north had been worst affected, with cuts of 22% per pupil. Researchers found government spending on support for children and young people ONE IN FOUR 15-YEAR-OLDS HAVE A READING AGE OF 12 OR BELOW According to Daily Mail, a quarter of all 15-year-olds have a reading age of twelve or below which puts them at a ‘disadvantage’ in their GCSEs, new research shows. They will struggle to understand questions in English language and even subjects such as science and maths, which have become increasingly ‘text heavy’.Test provider, GL Assessment, analysed the reading abilities of more PRIVATE SCHOOLS SHOULD 'PHASE OUT' MERIT BASED The Telegraph is reporting that private schools should stop trying to compete for the best students by luring them with scholarships and instead spend the money on bursaries, a leading headmistress has said.Emma Hattersley, head at the £32,000-a-year Godolphin School in Salisbury, said that scholarships for exceptionally talented pupils should be “phased out” in favour of fee assistance LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NET Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across GAVIN WILLIAMSON URGES ALL PUPILS AND THEIR FAMILIES TO The UK Education Secretary has urged students and their families to take a coronavirus test ahead of the return to classrooms next week, following the half-term break. The Government praised the “herculean efforts” of students and staff after more than 50 million rapid tests have been taken in schools and colleges across England sinceJanuary.
COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
THE IMPORTANCE OF BLACK HISTORY Teachers share their experiences as Wales makes black history a mandatory part of the curriculum. The new curriculum in Wales will make black history a mandatory part of education. It is the first of the four nations to take this step. But what does it mean in practice, and why is this such a EEDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS ARCHIVES Schools Improvement EduKit Solutions Ltd c/o Kingston Smith Devonshire House 60 Goswell Road London EC1M 7AD Email: schools@edukit.org.uk Tel: + 44 (0) 20 3191 9696 THE FOREIGN SECRETARY ARCHIVES Schools Improvement EduKit Solutions Ltd c/o Kingston Smith Devonshire House 60 Goswell Road London EC1M 7AD Email: schools@edukit.org.uk Tel: + 44 (0) 20 3191 9696 SECONDARY SCHOOL PUPILS WON’T BE FORCED TO WEAR MASKS IN Secondary school students will not be forced to wear face coverings in classrooms, as some will be ‘anxious and nervous’ about wearing them, an education minister has said. As millions of pupils in England begin to return to class after months of remote learning, children’s minister Vicky Ford said secondary school pupils should be ‘strongly encouraged’ to wear masks. PATTERDALE HALL ARCHIVES Schools Improvement EduKit Solutions Ltd c/o Kingston Smith Devonshire House 60 Goswell Road London EC1M 7AD Email: schools@edukit.org.uk Tel: + 44 (0) 20 3191 9696 RAISING ATTAINMENT: THE BARRIERS TO TRUE PARENTAL Raising Attainment: the barriers to true parental involvement. The importance of parents’ involvement in children’s learning is widely acknowledged. There is evidence to show that parental involvement can boost a child’s learning by up to five months in a year. Schools and nurseries work hard to organise curriculum eventsfor parents.
THE GREAT MEN PROJECT SENDS MEN INTO SCHOOLS TO TEACH BOYS The Great Men Project gets men to play their role in smashing the patriarchy. But, as the organisation’s project manager David Brockway stressed when we spoke, this is a project started by women. “Men aren’t taking the credit,” he stressed, “I never would have thought to start it myself. LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NET Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across ORAL EXAM DROPPED FROM LANGUAGE GCSES AND A-LEVELS FOR Pupils will not be tested on how they can speak French, Irish, German or Spanish to gain GCSEs, AS or A-levels in the languages in 2022. Northern Ireland exams board CCEA has dropped the 'speaking' units from all language qualifications. It means pupils will only be examined on listening to, reading and writing the language they arestudying.
COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
THE SIX COMMON COMPONENTS OF GOOD-QUALITY TEACHING The research we reviewed suggests there are six common components that are signatures of good-quality teaching: Content knowledge This is when teachers have a deep knowledge of the subject that they teach and can communicate content effectively to their students. We found strong evidence for the impact of this on student outcomes. REMOTE LEARNING INCREASES WORKLOAD, SAY 86% OF TEACHERS Remote learning increases workload, say 86% of teachers. Tes reports . Workload has “increased greatly” since remote learning was implemented, according to 45 per cent of the representative sample of 1,003 teachers responding to the YouGov poll. And the results published today showed that another 41 per cent said their workloadhad
SHOULD WHISTLEBLOWING TEACHERS BE GIVEN MORE PROTECTION Writing in the Guardian, Louise Tickle says teachers who report evidence of child abuse can all too often end up losing their job. Now, she says, campaigners are calling for better safeguards.. CLASS SIZE AND STAFFING IN SPECIAL SCHOOLS Class Size and Staffing in Special Schools. On the NUT website Kevin Courtney, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said: “School funding per pupil is falling at its fastest rate since the 1970s. Support for students with special educational needs has been, or is expected to be, reduced in their schools. FUNDING FOR PUPILS WITH SPECIAL EDUCATIONAL NEEDS DROPS 17 The government has been accused of failing children with special educational needs after a report found funding for pupils had been cut by 17% across England since 2015. The Guardian reports.The report by the thinktank IPPR North also revealed the north had been worst affected, with cuts of 22% per pupil. Researchers found government spending on support for children and young people ONE IN FOUR 15-YEAR-OLDS HAVE A READING AGE OF 12 OR BELOW According to Daily Mail, a quarter of all 15-year-olds have a reading age of twelve or below which puts them at a ‘disadvantage’ in their GCSEs, new research shows. They will struggle to understand questions in English language and even subjects such as science and maths, which have become increasingly ‘text heavy’.Test provider, GL Assessment, analysed the reading abilities of more PRIVATE SCHOOLS SHOULD 'PHASE OUT' MERIT BASED The Telegraph is reporting that private schools should stop trying to compete for the best students by luring them with scholarships and instead spend the money on bursaries, a leading headmistress has said.Emma Hattersley, head at the £32,000-a-year Godolphin School in Salisbury, said that scholarships for exceptionally talented pupils should be “phased out” in favour of fee assistance LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NET Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across ORAL EXAM DROPPED FROM LANGUAGE GCSES AND A-LEVELS FOR Pupils will not be tested on how they can speak French, Irish, German or Spanish to gain GCSEs, AS or A-levels in the languages in 2022. Northern Ireland exams board CCEA has dropped the 'speaking' units from all language qualifications. It means pupils will only be examined on listening to, reading and writing the language they arestudying.
COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
THE SIX COMMON COMPONENTS OF GOOD-QUALITY TEACHING The research we reviewed suggests there are six common components that are signatures of good-quality teaching: Content knowledge This is when teachers have a deep knowledge of the subject that they teach and can communicate content effectively to their students. We found strong evidence for the impact of this on student outcomes. REMOTE LEARNING INCREASES WORKLOAD, SAY 86% OF TEACHERS Remote learning increases workload, say 86% of teachers. Tes reports . Workload has “increased greatly” since remote learning was implemented, according to 45 per cent of the representative sample of 1,003 teachers responding to the YouGov poll. And the results published today showed that another 41 per cent said their workloadhad
SHOULD WHISTLEBLOWING TEACHERS BE GIVEN MORE PROTECTION Writing in the Guardian, Louise Tickle says teachers who report evidence of child abuse can all too often end up losing their job. Now, she says, campaigners are calling for better safeguards.. CLASS SIZE AND STAFFING IN SPECIAL SCHOOLS Class Size and Staffing in Special Schools. On the NUT website Kevin Courtney, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said: “School funding per pupil is falling at its fastest rate since the 1970s. Support for students with special educational needs has been, or is expected to be, reduced in their schools. FUNDING FOR PUPILS WITH SPECIAL EDUCATIONAL NEEDS DROPS 17 The government has been accused of failing children with special educational needs after a report found funding for pupils had been cut by 17% across England since 2015. The Guardian reports.The report by the thinktank IPPR North also revealed the north had been worst affected, with cuts of 22% per pupil. Researchers found government spending on support for children and young people ONE IN FOUR 15-YEAR-OLDS HAVE A READING AGE OF 12 OR BELOW According to Daily Mail, a quarter of all 15-year-olds have a reading age of twelve or below which puts them at a ‘disadvantage’ in their GCSEs, new research shows. They will struggle to understand questions in English language and even subjects such as science and maths, which have become increasingly ‘text heavy’.Test provider, GL Assessment, analysed the reading abilities of more PRIVATE SCHOOLS SHOULD 'PHASE OUT' MERIT BASED The Telegraph is reporting that private schools should stop trying to compete for the best students by luring them with scholarships and instead spend the money on bursaries, a leading headmistress has said.Emma Hattersley, head at the £32,000-a-year Godolphin School in Salisbury, said that scholarships for exceptionally talented pupils should be “phased out” in favour of fee assistance LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NET Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across GAVIN WILLIAMSON URGES ALL PUPILS AND THEIR FAMILIES TO The UK Education Secretary has urged students and their families to take a coronavirus test ahead of the return to classrooms next week, following the half-term break. The Government praised the “herculean efforts” of students and staff after more than 50 million rapid tests have been taken in schools and colleges across England sinceJanuary.
COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
THE IMPORTANCE OF BLACK HISTORY Teachers share their experiences as Wales makes black history a mandatory part of the curriculum. The new curriculum in Wales will make black history a mandatory part of education. It is the first of the four nations to take this step. But what does it mean in practice, and why is this such a EEDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS ARCHIVES Schools Improvement EduKit Solutions Ltd c/o Kingston Smith Devonshire House 60 Goswell Road London EC1M 7AD Email: schools@edukit.org.uk Tel: + 44 (0) 20 3191 9696 THE FOREIGN SECRETARY ARCHIVES Schools Improvement EduKit Solutions Ltd c/o Kingston Smith Devonshire House 60 Goswell Road London EC1M 7AD Email: schools@edukit.org.uk Tel: + 44 (0) 20 3191 9696 SECONDARY SCHOOL PUPILS WON’T BE FORCED TO WEAR MASKS IN Secondary school students will not be forced to wear face coverings in classrooms, as some will be ‘anxious and nervous’ about wearing them, an education minister has said. As millions of pupils in England begin to return to class after months of remote learning, children’s minister Vicky Ford said secondary school pupils should be ‘strongly encouraged’ to wear masks. PATTERDALE HALL ARCHIVES Schools Improvement EduKit Solutions Ltd c/o Kingston Smith Devonshire House 60 Goswell Road London EC1M 7AD Email: schools@edukit.org.uk Tel: + 44 (0) 20 3191 9696 RAISING ATTAINMENT: THE BARRIERS TO TRUE PARENTAL Raising Attainment: the barriers to true parental involvement. The importance of parents’ involvement in children’s learning is widely acknowledged. There is evidence to show that parental involvement can boost a child’s learning by up to five months in a year. Schools and nurseries work hard to organise curriculum eventsfor parents.
THE GREAT MEN PROJECT SENDS MEN INTO SCHOOLS TO TEACH BOYS The Great Men Project gets men to play their role in smashing the patriarchy. But, as the organisation’s project manager David Brockway stressed when we spoke, this is a project started by women. “Men aren’t taking the credit,” he stressed, “I never would have thought to start it myself. LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NET Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
THE SIX COMMON COMPONENTS OF GOOD-QUALITY TEACHING The research we reviewed suggests there are six common components that are signatures of good-quality teaching: Content knowledge This is when teachers have a deep knowledge of the subject that they teach and can communicate content effectively to their students. We found strong evidence for the impact of this on student outcomes. SECONDARY SCHOOL PUPILS WON’T BE FORCED TO WEAR MASKS IN Secondary school students will not be forced to wear face coverings in classrooms, as some will be ‘anxious and nervous’ about wearing them, an education minister has said. As millions of pupils in England begin to return to class after months of remote learning, children’s minister Vicky Ford said secondary school pupils should be ‘strongly encouraged’ to wear masks. REMOTE LEARNING INCREASES WORKLOAD, SAY 86% OF TEACHERS Remote learning increases workload, say 86% of teachers. Tes reports . Workload has “increased greatly” since remote learning was implemented, according to 45 per cent of the representative sample of 1,003 teachers responding to the YouGov poll. And the results published today showed that another 41 per cent said their workloadhad
SHOULD WHISTLEBLOWING TEACHERS BE GIVEN MORE PROTECTION Writing in the Guardian, Louise Tickle says teachers who report evidence of child abuse can all too often end up losing their job. Now, she says, campaigners are calling for better safeguards.. ONE IN FOUR 15-YEAR-OLDS HAVE A READING AGE OF 12 OR BELOW According to Daily Mail, a quarter of all 15-year-olds have a reading age of twelve or below which puts them at a ‘disadvantage’ in their GCSEs, new research shows. They will struggle to understand questions in English language and even subjects such as science and maths, which have become increasingly ‘text heavy’.Test provider, GL Assessment, analysed the reading abilities of more PRIVATE SCHOOLS SHOULD 'PHASE OUT' MERIT BASED The Telegraph is reporting that private schools should stop trying to compete for the best students by luring them with scholarships and instead spend the money on bursaries, a leading headmistress has said.Emma Hattersley, head at the £32,000-a-year Godolphin School in Salisbury, said that scholarships for exceptionally talented pupils should be “phased out” in favour of fee assistance FORMER NATIONAL BALLET STAR GUILTY OF SEXUALLY ABUSING Former National Ballet star guilty of sexually abusing young students. Metro reports . Yat-Sen Chang, 49, groomed and intimidated his victims, all between the ages of 16 and 18. He inappropriately touched young girls during massages for six years and three months. His victims were ‘children whom he had been trusted to teach’ at the TEACHERS QUITTING PROFESSION BECAUSE OF BULLYING BY Sky News is reporting that teachers have considered self-harming or quit the profession because of bullying by colleagues, new research suggests.Data from the NASUWT reveals four in five teachers have been bullied in the past year.The teaching union says bullying in the workplace is ruining the lives of teachers - leaving many feeling depressed, anxious, lacking confidence and having to LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NET Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
THE SIX COMMON COMPONENTS OF GOOD-QUALITY TEACHING The research we reviewed suggests there are six common components that are signatures of good-quality teaching: Content knowledge This is when teachers have a deep knowledge of the subject that they teach and can communicate content effectively to their students. We found strong evidence for the impact of this on student outcomes. SECONDARY SCHOOL PUPILS WON’T BE FORCED TO WEAR MASKS IN Secondary school students will not be forced to wear face coverings in classrooms, as some will be ‘anxious and nervous’ about wearing them, an education minister has said. As millions of pupils in England begin to return to class after months of remote learning, children’s minister Vicky Ford said secondary school pupils should be ‘strongly encouraged’ to wear masks. REMOTE LEARNING INCREASES WORKLOAD, SAY 86% OF TEACHERS Remote learning increases workload, say 86% of teachers. Tes reports . Workload has “increased greatly” since remote learning was implemented, according to 45 per cent of the representative sample of 1,003 teachers responding to the YouGov poll. And the results published today showed that another 41 per cent said their workloadhad
SHOULD WHISTLEBLOWING TEACHERS BE GIVEN MORE PROTECTION Writing in the Guardian, Louise Tickle says teachers who report evidence of child abuse can all too often end up losing their job. Now, she says, campaigners are calling for better safeguards.. ONE IN FOUR 15-YEAR-OLDS HAVE A READING AGE OF 12 OR BELOW According to Daily Mail, a quarter of all 15-year-olds have a reading age of twelve or below which puts them at a ‘disadvantage’ in their GCSEs, new research shows. They will struggle to understand questions in English language and even subjects such as science and maths, which have become increasingly ‘text heavy’.Test provider, GL Assessment, analysed the reading abilities of more PRIVATE SCHOOLS SHOULD 'PHASE OUT' MERIT BASED The Telegraph is reporting that private schools should stop trying to compete for the best students by luring them with scholarships and instead spend the money on bursaries, a leading headmistress has said.Emma Hattersley, head at the £32,000-a-year Godolphin School in Salisbury, said that scholarships for exceptionally talented pupils should be “phased out” in favour of fee assistance FORMER NATIONAL BALLET STAR GUILTY OF SEXUALLY ABUSING Former National Ballet star guilty of sexually abusing young students. Metro reports . Yat-Sen Chang, 49, groomed and intimidated his victims, all between the ages of 16 and 18. He inappropriately touched young girls during massages for six years and three months. His victims were ‘children whom he had been trusted to teach’ at the TEACHERS QUITTING PROFESSION BECAUSE OF BULLYING BY Sky News is reporting that teachers have considered self-harming or quit the profession because of bullying by colleagues, new research suggests.Data from the NASUWT reveals four in five teachers have been bullied in the past year.The teaching union says bullying in the workplace is ruining the lives of teachers - leaving many feeling depressed, anxious, lacking confidence and having to LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NET Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across CORONAVIRUS: COVID TESTS EXPANDED TO ALL NI POST-PRIMARY Covid-19 testing in Northern Ireland's post-primary schools is to be extended to all pupils from this week. Previously, lateral flow device (LFD) tests had been made available to older students in years 12 to 14, as well as in some other education centres. KIDS AGED 12-15 COULD GET COVID VACCINE FROM AUGUST TO As cases rise among young people, the government is drafting plans to roll out coronavirus vaccines for 12 to 15-year-olds as early as August to stave off breakouts when schools return in the autumn Children could start getting Covid jabs in the summer STILL UNCLEAR WHETHER TEENAGERS NEED A COVID-19 JAB It is not yet clear whether children aged 12 and over should get the Coivd-19 vaccine, a member of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) has said. Professor Adam Finn, who is part of the body that advises the Government on vaccines. OCKBROOK SCHOOL: ONE OF THE UK'S OLDEST BOARDING SCHOOLS 17 hours ago · BBC reports . One of the UK’s oldest boarding schools has announced it will close next month after running out of money. Ockbrook School in Derbyshire, founded in 1799, said it remained “significantly loss-making”, a situation made worse bythe pandemic.
LABOUR TO FORCE COMMONS VOTE ON ‘TOTALLY INSUFFICIENT Labour is to force a Commons vote on the government’s school catch-up plans in the hope of embarrasing ministers over “totally insufficient” funding which has already led to resignation of the education recovery tsar. The government announced a new funding package of £1.4bn to help children to make up learning lost due toCovid lockdowns.
SIR KEVAN COLLINS: WHO IS THE NEW COVID CATCH-UP TSAR Less than two years ago, he told Tes that England’s education system is “not yet good enough for everybody”. Now Sir Kevan Collins, former head of the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF), has been asked to step in and oversee the recovery from arguably the EDUCATION SECRETARY TAKES 'FULL RESPONSIBILITY' FOR The new education secretary has said she will take 'absolute responsibility' for this year's qualifications system. Shirley-Anne Somerville promised she would not blame anyone else if there were any issues with the awards. She said Scotland had a fair, credible and a consistent assessment policy despite criticism of the Scottish Qualification Authority (SQA). JAMIE OLIVER: ‘MARCUS RASHFORD HAS DONE A BRILLIANT JOB Jamie Oliver has been campaigning against child food poverty since the release of his 2005 television series Jamie’s School Dinners. But the past year has seen him slowly passing the baton over to England footballer Marcus Rashford, whose campaigning on free school meals has caused social media storms and government U-turns. DAME MARY BEARD CALLS FOR EDUCATIONAL DISADVANTAGE TO BE Tackling inequality at universities must start by tackling disadvantage in society, historian Dame Mary Beard has told the BBC. The Cambridge professor is stepping down next year after almost 40 years of teaching and research. Dame Mary said universities could not solve the problems on their own. LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NETDRIVER IMPROVEMENT SCHOOL FLORIDASCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLANSCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLAN EXAMPLESSCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLAN IDEASSCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLAN TEMPLATESCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PROCESS Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
THE SIX COMMON COMPONENTS OF GOOD-QUALITY TEACHING The research we reviewed suggests there are six common components that are signatures of good-quality teaching: Content knowledge This is when teachers have a deep knowledge of the subject that they teach and can communicate content effectively to their students. We found strong evidence for the impact of this on student outcomes. REMOTE LEARNING INCREASES WORKLOAD, SAY 86% OF TEACHERS Remote learning increases workload, say 86% of teachers. Tes reports . Workload has “increased greatly” since remote learning was implemented, according to 45 per cent of the representative sample of 1,003 teachers responding to the YouGov poll. And the results published today showed that another 41 per cent said their workloadhad
CLASS SIZE AND STAFFING IN SPECIAL SCHOOLS Class Size and Staffing in Special Schools. On the NUT website Kevin Courtney, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said: “School funding per pupil is falling at its fastest rate since the 1970s. Support for students with special educational needs has been, or is expected to be, reduced in their schools. WHY BRITISH VALUES SHOULD BE TAUGHT AS PART OF CHARACTER Writing in the Conversation, Tom Harrison from the University of Birmingham School of Education argues there are good reasons why British values should be taught in schools, but says the policy needs a re-think.For the last year, schools around the country have been obliged to promote fundamental British values. So far, little officially has been said about how the new policy is being SHOULD WHISTLEBLOWING TEACHERS BE GIVEN MORE PROTECTION Writing in the Guardian, Louise Tickle says teachers who report evidence of child abuse can all too often end up losing their job. Now, she says, campaigners are calling for better safeguards.. ONE IN FOUR 15-YEAR-OLDS HAVE A READING AGE OF 12 OR BELOW According to Daily Mail, a quarter of all 15-year-olds have a reading age of twelve or below which puts them at a ‘disadvantage’ in their GCSEs, new research shows. They will struggle to understand questions in English language and even subjects such as science and maths, which have become increasingly ‘text heavy’.Test provider, GL Assessment, analysed the reading abilities of more TEACHERS QUITTING PROFESSION BECAUSE OF BULLYING BY Sky News is reporting that teachers have considered self-harming or quit the profession because of bullying by colleagues, new research suggests.Data from the NASUWT reveals four in five teachers have been bullied in the past year.The teaching union says bullying in the workplace is ruining the lives of teachers - leaving many feeling depressed, anxious, lacking confidence and having to 'TEACHERS MUST BE WHISTLEBLOWERS ABOUT WORKPLACE BULLYING According to NASUWT, 4 out of 5 teachers have experienced some form of bullying in the workplace. This is an extraordinarily high number of people who are admitting to feeling that they are bullied, either by adults or children. 'Where is the support?', asks a deputy head in Tes.Data on whistleblowing within education is notoriously difficult to find. With the rise of large Mats, this data LATEST SCHOOLS NEWS FROM SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT NETDRIVER IMPROVEMENT SCHOOL FLORIDASCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLANSCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLAN EXAMPLESSCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLAN IDEASSCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PLAN TEMPLATESCHOOL IMPROVEMENT PROCESS Daily Schools News Round UpSchools Improvement is a daily round-up of schools news and schools-related stories from the media, along with polls, competitions, opinion and guest posts.Schools Improvement is for school leaders, teachers, governors, parents and policy makers (or anyone who cares about our schools!).Stay informedThe site gives you a quick summary of what's being reported across COVID-19: WILSTHORPE SCHOOL SHUT AFTER MORE THAN 100 TEST A school will stay shut until next week after more than 100 secondary school pupils and staff tested positive for coronavirus.Wilsthorpe School, in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, did not reopen following the bank holiday after infections were confirmed. Now the school, which has about 950 pupils, has said further cases mean it will not fully reopenuntil 11 May.
THE SIX COMMON COMPONENTS OF GOOD-QUALITY TEACHING The research we reviewed suggests there are six common components that are signatures of good-quality teaching: Content knowledge This is when teachers have a deep knowledge of the subject that they teach and can communicate content effectively to their students. We found strong evidence for the impact of this on student outcomes. REMOTE LEARNING INCREASES WORKLOAD, SAY 86% OF TEACHERS Remote learning increases workload, say 86% of teachers. Tes reports . Workload has “increased greatly” since remote learning was implemented, according to 45 per cent of the representative sample of 1,003 teachers responding to the YouGov poll. And the results published today showed that another 41 per cent said their workloadhad
CLASS SIZE AND STAFFING IN SPECIAL SCHOOLS Class Size and Staffing in Special Schools. On the NUT website Kevin Courtney, General Secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said: “School funding per pupil is falling at its fastest rate since the 1970s. Support for students with special educational needs has been, or is expected to be, reduced in their schools. WHY BRITISH VALUES SHOULD BE TAUGHT AS PART OF CHARACTER Writing in the Conversation, Tom Harrison from the University of Birmingham School of Education argues there are good reasons why British values should be taught in schools, but says the policy needs a re-think.For the last year, schools around the country have been obliged to promote fundamental British values. So far, little officially has been said about how the new policy is being SHOULD WHISTLEBLOWING TEACHERS BE GIVEN MORE PROTECTION Writing in the Guardian, Louise Tickle says teachers who report evidence of child abuse can all too often end up losing their job. Now, she says, campaigners are calling for better safeguards.. ONE IN FOUR 15-YEAR-OLDS HAVE A READING AGE OF 12 OR BELOW According to Daily Mail, a quarter of all 15-year-olds have a reading age of twelve or below which puts them at a ‘disadvantage’ in their GCSEs, new research shows. They will struggle to understand questions in English language and even subjects such as science and maths, which have become increasingly ‘text heavy’.Test provider, GL Assessment, analysed the reading abilities of more TEACHERS QUITTING PROFESSION BECAUSE OF BULLYING BY Sky News is reporting that teachers have considered self-harming or quit the profession because of bullying by colleagues, new research suggests.Data from the NASUWT reveals four in five teachers have been bullied in the past year.The teaching union says bullying in the workplace is ruining the lives of teachers - leaving many feeling depressed, anxious, lacking confidence and having to 'TEACHERS MUST BE WHISTLEBLOWERS ABOUT WORKPLACE BULLYING According to NASUWT, 4 out of 5 teachers have experienced some form of bullying in the workplace. This is an extraordinarily high number of people who are admitting to feeling that they are bullied, either by adults or children. 'Where is the support?', asks a deputy head in Tes.Data on whistleblowing within education is notoriously difficult to find. With the rise of large Mats, this data COVID: GENERATION OF CHILDREN IN ENGLAND ‘AT RISK’ FROM A generation of children is at risk of being failed by the government if it does not properly address the educational needs caused by lost learning during the Covid pandemic, a social mobility expert has said. The comments came after the unexpected resignation of the government’s schools recovery chief, Sir Kevan Collins, onWednesday.
WE NO LONGER HAVE ‘JOBS FOR LIFE’ A careers revolution has been on the cards for years now – not least because we are living longer – and the coronavirus pandemic has only accelerated it. Life has changed and with it our careers – and it’s now even more apparent that our education system has failed tokeep up.
DOZENS OF SCHOOLS IN ENGLISH COVID HOTSPOTS REINTRODUCE Dozens of secondary schools in England have reintroduced mask requirements in the classroom, despite government guidance dropping the rule in May. Other schools in the north-west, including in Blackburn with Darwen, Bolton and Bury, had already asked students to FRESH CALL FOR CUTS TO CLASS SIZES AND CONTACT TIME A move will be made this week to reduce class sizes in Scotland to 20 while also cutting teachers' class-contact time to 20 hours, as part of a nine-year 'incremental' plan that would be fully realised in 2030. The proposal is part of a motion going to the first annual general meeting of the EIS, Scotland's largest teaching union, since the Covid crisis began. BLACK STUDENTS HAVE TO ‘WORK HARDER’ TO CONNECT WITH Black students often have to “work harder” than their peers to connect with assessments and curriculum content, a report suggests. Widening curriculums and course content will help black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) students relate learning to their own experiences, a leading academic at the University of Leicester hassaid.
EDUCATION SECRETARY SHIRLEY-ANNE SOMERVILLE'S BIG PLANS The Scottish government said that the said that the “role, remit and purpose” of both bodies would be considered, as well as “their functions and governance”, which sounds like an all-encompassing exercise that could lead to radical steps. GAVIN WILLIAMSON UNDER PRESSURE TO RESIGN AFTER EDUCATION Gavin Williamson is under pressure to resign after the schools catch-up tsar quit with a stinging condemnation of the Government’s 1.4 billion education recovery fund. Sir Kevan Collins resigned on Wednesday after just four months as education recovery commissioner, warning the Government’s support package “falls far short of what is needed” to meet the scale of the challenge. MEET SIR KEVAN COLLINS “If anyone now said that England’s schools are not interested in research – well, that’s just bollocks,” Sir Kevan Collins, chief executive of the Education Endowment Foundation, says. Collins is speaking frankly – and he can do so because he knows first-hand of the many thousands of primaries and secondaries that have volunteered to take part in research. WILLIAMSON ACCUSES SCHOOLS OF ‘RESTRICTING’ LUNCH HOURS IN Gavin Williamson accused some schools of “restricting” what children can do in their lunch breaks, as he defended the Government’s catch-up package. The education secretary told MPs that there is a “disparity” across the sector around the length of the school day, adding that it is “an important issue with so much catching up still to do”. THE IMPORTANCE OF BLACK HISTORY Teachers share their experiences as Wales makes black history a mandatory part of the curriculum. The new curriculum in Wales will make black history a mandatory part of education. It is the first of the four nations to take this step. But what does it mean in practice, and why is this such a__Menu
* Home
* Articles
* Guest Posts
* Columnists
* All News
* __ Close
* Bulletin
* About
* Contact
* __
* __
* __
*
YOUR DAILY UPDATE OF MEDIA SCHOOLS NEWS PLUS POLLS, DISCUSSION ANDORIGINAL CONTENT…
LEADING
GAVIN WILLIAMSON UNDER PRESSURE TO RESIGN AFTER EDUCATION CHIEF QUITS OVER LACK OF FUNDING Posted: June 3, 2021Comments: 0
Gavin Williamson is under pressure to resign after the schools catch-up tsar quit with a stinging condemnation of the Government’s Continue reading →LATEST POLL
DO YOU THINK SCHOOLS SHOULD CLOSE AGAIN?Yes
No
Vote
TOP ITEMS
EDITORIAL: WILLIAMSON'S SERIAL INCOMPETENCE MAKES HIM THE IDEA CANDIDATE TO TAKE THE BLAME Posted: June 3, 2021Comments: 0
EDUCATION SECRETARY TAKES 'FULL RESPONSIBILITY' FOR QUALIFICATIONSSYSTEM
Posted: June 3, 2021Comments: 0
SIR KEVAN COLLINS: WHO IS THE NEW COVID CATCH-UP TSAR? Posted: June 3, 2021Comments: 0
SCHOOL CATCH-UP TSAR LASHES BORIS JOHNSON AFTER REVEALING HE HAD 'NOOPTION' BUT TO QUIT
Posted: June 3, 2021Comments: 0
COVID: GENERATION OF CHILDREN IN ENGLAND ‘AT RISK’ FROM LOSTLEARNING
Posted: June 3, 2021Comments: 0
UNION CRITICISES ‘PITIFUL’ £1.4BN COVID CATCH-UP PLAN FOR ENGLANDPUPILS
Posted: June 3, 2021Comments: 0
OTHER FEATURED NEWS
NEW CATCH-UP FUNDING IS AROUND £50 MORE PER PUPIL A YEAR AND ‘LONG WAY OFF’ WHAT IS NEEDED, THINK-TANK SAYS Posted: June 2, 2021 A think-tank has estimated extra funding announced for education recovery works out at around £50 more per pupil every year, Continue reading → PLANS TO SHORTEN SCHOOL SUMMER HOLIDAYS AFTER COVID HAVE BEEN SHELVED Posted: June 2, 2021 Plans to shorten the school summer holidays after the Covid pandemic have been shelved, the Education Secretary has confirmed. Gavin Continue reading → SCHOOL DAY TO BE EXTENDED 30 MINUTES TO HELP PUPILS CATCH-UP AFTERCOVID, REPORTS SAY
Posted: June 2, 2021 Boris Johnson’s government is considering a plan to make the school day 30 minutes longer in England, under leaked proposals Continue reading → AUTUMN CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY COVID CASES LINKED TO ONE NIGHTCLUB Posted: June 2, 2021 Nearly three-quarters of coronavirus cases among University of Cambridge students last autumn have been traced back to a singlenightclub,
Continue reading → TEACHING UNIONS CRITICISE PLAN TO EXTEND SCHOOL DAY IN ENGLAND Posted: June 2, 2021 Teachers’ unions have criticised government plans to extend the school day in England by 30 minutes and said they could Continue reading → COVID-19: GOVERNMENT URGED TO DELAY 21 JUNE REOPENING BY A MONTH UNTILSCHOOLS BREAK UP
Posted: June 2, 2021 There is growing doubt over whether the prime minister will be able to keep to his 21 June date due Continue reading → NI SCHOOLS: £180M NEEDED TO TACKLE EDUCATIONAL UNDERACHIEVEMENT Posted: June 1, 2021 The Department of Education needs to spend more than £180m on widespread measures to tackle educational underachievement over thenext
Continue reading → NEW BID TO SECURE SQA AND EDUCATION SCOTLAND REFORM Posted: June 1, 2021 Scotland’s national qualifications and curriculum development bodies are "not fit for purpose" and must be reformed, the Scottish LiberalDemocrats
Continue reading → SCHOOL DAY TO BE EXTENDED 30 MINUTES TO HELP PUPILS CATCH-UP AFTERCOVID, REPORTS SAY
Posted: June 1, 2021 Boris Johnson’s government is considering a plan to make the school day 30 minutes longer in England, under leaked proposals Continue reading →LATEST NEWS BY TYPE
*
PRIMARY
View All
*
TEACHING DIVERSITY IN PRIMARY SCHOOLS HAS BARELY PROGRESSED IN THE LAST FIVE YEARS, FIGURES SHOW Posted: July 16, 2020*
THERE’S NO POINT IN REPORTING KS1 AND KS2 ASSESSMENTS Posted: May 14, 2020*
STARMER URGES MINISTERS TO REOPEN SCHOOLS AS SOON AS POSSIBLE TO HELPPOORER CHILDREN
Posted: April 29, 2020*
TOO MANY CHILDREN MISS OUT ON EDUCATION — BUT BETTER DATA CAN HELP Posted: April 28, 2020*
SECONDARY
View All
*
STARMER URGES MINISTERS TO REOPEN SCHOOLS AS SOON AS POSSIBLE TO HELPPOORER CHILDREN
Posted: April 29, 2020*
TOO MANY CHILDREN MISS OUT ON EDUCATION — BUT BETTER DATA CAN HELP Posted: April 28, 2020*
SCHOOLS SHUTDOWN LIKELY TO WIDEN ATTAINMENT GAP, SAYS OFSTED CHIEF Posted: April 27, 2020*
CORONAVIRUS IN THE UK: RETIRED TEACHERS AND UNIVERSITY GRADUATES URGED TO FORM VOLUNTEER 'ARMY' TO TUTOR DISADVANTAGED CHILDREN AFTERLOCKDOWN
Posted: April 27, 2020*
LEADERSHIP
View All
*
SCHOOL CATCH-UP TSAR LASHES BORIS JOHNSON AFTER REVEALING HE HAD 'NOOPTION' BUT TO QUIT
Posted: June 3, 2021*
SCHOOL DAY TO BE EXTENDED 30 MINUTES TO HELP PUPILS CATCH-UP AFTERCOVID, REPORTS SAY
Posted: June 2, 2021*
TEACHING UNIONS CRITICISE PLAN TO EXTEND SCHOOL DAY IN ENGLAND Posted: June 2, 2021*
SCHOOL DAY TO BE EXTENDED 30 MINUTES TO HELP PUPILS CATCH-UP AFTERCOVID, REPORTS SAY
Posted: June 1, 2021*
TEACHING
View All
*
TEACHING IN THE LOCKDOWN HAS SHOWN ME HOW POWERFUL 1-2-1 TIME WITHPUPILS IS
Posted: April 29, 2020*
UNIVERSITY IN DRIVE TO PUSH MBA APPRENTICE PLACES AS GOVERNMENTREVIEWS FUNDING
Posted: April 3, 2020*
CORONAVIRUS: 'BE KIND' TO YOURSELVES, HOME-SCHOOL PARENTS TOLD Posted: April 2, 2020*
ANALYSIS: ARE TEACHER ASSESSED GCSE GRADES A GOOD IDEA? Posted: April 2, 2020*
OFSTED
View All
*
NSPCC HELPLINE SET UP IN WAKE OF SCHOOLS ABUSE SCANDAL REFERS 65 ALLEGATIONS TO AUTHORITIES Posted: May 24, 2021*
SHORTER SCHOOL SUMMER HOLIDAYS ARE 'LONG OVERDUE', SAYS EX-HEAD OFOFSTED
Posted: May 18, 2021*
PUPILS IN ENGLAND WAITING UP TO FIVE YEARS FOR SPECIAL NEEDS PLAN,SAYS OFSTED
Posted: May 13, 2021*
FORMER OFSTED CHIEF DRAFTED IN TO HELP PIMLICO ACADEMY HEADPosted: May 4, 2021
*
POLICY/DFE
View All
*
GAVIN WILLIAMSON UNDER PRESSURE TO RESIGN AFTER EDUCATION CHIEF QUITS OVER LACK OF FUNDING Posted: June 3, 2021*
NEW CATCH-UP FUNDING IS AROUND £50 MORE PER PUPIL A YEAR AND ‘LONG WAY OFF’ WHAT IS NEEDED, THINK-TANK SAYS Posted: June 2, 2021*
SCHOOL DAY TO BE EXTENDED 30 MINUTES TO HELP PUPILS CATCH-UP AFTERCOVID, REPORTS SAY
Posted: June 2, 2021*
SCHOOL DAY TO BE EXTENDED 30 MINUTES TO HELP PUPILS CATCH-UP AFTERCOVID, REPORTS SAY
Posted: June 1, 2021*
EXAMS/OFQUAL
View All
*
EDUCATION SECRETARY TAKES 'FULL RESPONSIBILITY' FOR QUALIFICATIONSSYSTEM
Posted: June 3, 2021*
FURIOUS SCOTS PUPILS FEAR 'GROTESQUELY UNFAIR' EXAMS SYSTEM WILL LIMITTHEIR FUTURE
Posted: May 31, 2021*
SCOTLAND'S REPLACEMENT HIGHERS SYSTEM: THERE WILL BE HELL TO PAY IF TEACHERS' FEARS ARE BORNE OUT – SCOTSMAN COMMENT Posted: May 30, 2021*
PARENTS IN UK PREPARE FOR LEGAL ACTION OVER A-LEVEL RESULTS Posted: May 30, 2021*
LOCAL AUTHORITIES
View All
*
COUNCIL LEADERS CALL FOR FUNDING FOR FREE SCHOOL MEALS OVER EASTER Posted: April 6, 2020*
CORONAVIRUS: FREE SCHOOL MEALS - WHAT ARE THE SUPERMARKET VOUCHERS ANDHOW DO THEY WORK?
Posted: April 1, 2020*
CORONAVIRUS: NHS DOCTOR FORCED TO 'GIVE UP' HER CHILDREN AS NURSERIESCLOSE
Posted: April 1, 2020*
PARENT FINES FOR TAKING CHILDREN ON HOLIDAY DURING SCHOOL TIME SHOT UP BY ALMOST 30% LAST YEAR, FIGURES REVEAL Posted: March 27, 2020*
PRIVATE SCHOOLS
View All
*
A-LEVEL AND GCSE GRADE INFLATION ‘INEVITABLE IN ENGLISH SYSTEM’Posted: May 9, 2021
*
SCOTTISH BOARDING SCHOOLS APOLOGISE FOR ALLEGED HISTORIC ABUSEFOLLOWING INQUIRY
Posted: March 16, 2021*
BOARDING PUPILS FROM OVERSEAS CAN QUARANTINE IN SCHOOL Posted: March 5, 2021*
SOCIAL DISTANCING 'IMPOSSIBLE' IN BOARDING SCHOOLS Posted: June 3, 2020*
ACADEMIES & FREE SCHOOLSView All
*
EXCLUSIVE: LABOUR'S PLAN TO MAKE ACADEMIES LA SCHOOLS Posted: June 5, 2020*
CORONAVIRUS: FREE SCHOOL MEALS - WHAT ARE THE SUPERMARKET VOUCHERS ANDHOW DO THEY WORK?
Posted: April 1, 2020*
CORONAVIRUS: FREE SCHOOL MEALS CHILDREN TO GET FOOD VOUCHERS Posted: March 31, 2020*
CORONAVIRUS: MAT INVESTS £2M IN TECH FOR POORER PUPILS Posted: March 30, 2020*
RESEARCH
View All
*
ANALYSIS: ARE TEACHER ASSESSED GCSE GRADES A GOOD IDEA? Posted: April 2, 2020*
1 IN 6 TRAINING PROVIDERS WARN THEY MAY GO BUST Posted: April 1, 2020*
NEUROSCIENCE COURSE TO FILL 'GAP' IN TEACHER TRAINING Posted: March 31, 2020*
TROUBLED HS2 COLLEGE SPENT £73K ON FAILED OFSTED LEGAL CHALLENGE Posted: March 27, 2020*
HIGHER EDUCATION/ACCESSView All
*
MORE OLDER LEARNERS SIGN UP FOR UNIVERSITY AMID DRIVE TO UPSKILLDURING PANDEMIC
Posted: May 27, 2021*
LONDON SOUTH BANK UNIVERSITY STAFF SOUND ALARM OVER DROP IN COURSES Posted: May 25, 2021*
STRENGTHENING FREE SPEECH LAWS ‘WILL COUNTER CHILLING CENSORSHIP ONCAMPUSES’
Posted: May 12, 2021*
OXFORD ACCEPTS RECORD NUMBER OF STUDENTS FROM MOST DEPRIVED AREAS OFTHE UK
Posted: May 11, 2021 LOOKING FOR SOMETHING SPECIFIC…SCHOOLS IMPROVEMENT
EduKit Solutions Ltdc/o Kingston Smith
Devonshire House
60 Goswell Road
London
EC1M 7AD
Email: schools@edukit.org.uk Tel: + 44 (0) 20 3191 9696MENU
Home
All News
News Bulletin
Guest Posts
About
Privacy
Contact
TOP SECTIONS
Teaching
Primary
Secondary
Ofsted
Policy
Polls
FEEDS
Schools Improvement, 2019. All rights reserved. This site uses cookies: Find out more.Okay, thank you
Details
Copyright © 2022 ArchiveBay.com. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | DMCA | 2021 | Feedback | Advertising | RSS 2.0