Education in the media: 18 November
...get more young people involved in music and arts. These hubs help hundreds of thousands of five to 18-year-olds each year take part in activities like playing an instrument, singing...
...get more young people involved in music and arts. These hubs help hundreds of thousands of five to 18-year-olds each year take part in activities like playing an instrument, singing...
...and the Proud Trust’s Rainbow Flag Award which recognises schools for their achievements in preventing and tackling HBT bullying. We also have recently funded the UK Safer Internet Centre to...
Education Secretary Justine Greening has answered questions from students on The Student Room, the largest online student community in the world. Students aged between 14 and 24 submitted questions covering everything from grammar schools, exams, tuition fees to mental health …
Today’s news review will look at inaccurate claims by the NUT and ATL about school funding, and media reports about the Early Years census.
Today's news review looks at a report into social mobility.
Today’s news review looks at a report on children going missing from care.
Today’s news review looks at a report on post-19 education, support for school libraries, the cost of childcare for children below school age and the royal charters for the UK's research councils
Robert Halfon, Skills and Apprenticeships Minister, wrote the following comment piece for the New Statesman. My vision has always been simple: that each and every person no matter what their age or background gets a chance at a decent job …
Today’s news review looks at a report on head teacher recruitment that doesn’t tally with the figures and a report into apprenticeships.
...that works for everyone, not just the privileged few, and education is at the heart of that ambition. Thanks to the government’s reforms over the last six years, more...