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Media Officer

Supporting families through children’s centres and services

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: early years
a child drawing on the floor with chalk

Children’s centres can play an important role in supporting families, and local councils decide how to organise and provide services for families in their areas to meet local needs – whether this is through children’s centre buildings or delivering services in different ways, and we continuously reflect on what works best.

Recruiting top professionals into teaching

a teacher holding a paper he is marking, and looking quite happy with himself about it

Teaching in further education is an incredibly rewarding career. We are reforming technical education in this country with the introduction of new T Levels and we want more staff with industry skills to pass on their expertise and inspire the next generation.

Ensuring quality and value for money in higher education

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Damian Hinds, Education Standards, Higher Education, SEND, Universities
a group of students sitting at a table revising

The opportunity to study at university should be open to anyone with the talent and potential to benefit from higher education. With students and taxpayers sharing the cost of higher education it’s right that we challenge those institutions which could appear to be more focused on ‘getting bums on seats’ than getting students into high quality courses worth paying for.

How we are educating the next generation about the battle on climate change

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: A Level, Apprenticeships, Curriculum, GCSE, Ofqual
a blurred image of children playing in a playground wearing their school uniforms

The curriculum also includes the knowledge pupils need to help address climate change in the future. For example, in design and technology pupils are taught to consider the impact of the products they design on individuals, society and the environment. Schools have the autonomy to go into as much depth on these subjects as they see fit.

Education Secretary on Anderton Park protests

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Damian Hinds, Sex and Relationship Education
a school road sign in the forefront, trees in the backgroudn, the leaves with a yellow tinge suggesting early onset signs of autumn

It is unacceptable that children at Anderton Park are missing out on education because of the threat of protests. There is no place for protests outside school gates. They can frighten children, intimidate staff and parents and in the worst cases be hijacked by individuals with a vested interest and no links to the schools. It is time for these protests to stop.

Funding our schools and building an apprenticeship system for the future

a classroom of children engaging in a lesson

We have been clear that there is more money going into our schools than ever before, and since 2017, we have given every local authority more money for every 5 to 16 year old in every school and made funding fairer across the country.