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schools

  • Infrastructure strategy: Hospitals and schools focus of funding push

    Politics

    The government will plough £10bn a year into restoring Britain’s crumbling schools, hospitals and prisons as part of a long-awaited infrastructure strategy outlining the state’s investment priorities over the next decade. Over £6bn a year will be devoted to hospital maintenance over the next decade, in a move that the Treasury said will cut waiting [...]

    The government hopes to 'get Britain building' with its infrastructure strategy
  • The Debate: Should we use ChatGPT in the classroom?

    Opinion

    Labour had pledged to put the UK at the forefront a revolution in AI and edtech, but should we really be using ChatGPT in the classroom?

  • Free breakfast clubs are an admission the system has failed working parents

    Breakfast clubs are now essential for many working parents, but they don't come free, writes Alys Denby in today's Notebook.

    BURNLEY, ENGLAND - MARCH 22: Labour's Shadow Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson talks with children as they attend Cherry Fold Primary School's breakfast club on March 22, 2024 in Burnley, England. Labour's Shadow Education Secretary visited the breakfast program at Burnley's Cherry Fold Primary School and outlined Labour's plans to expand free breakfast initiatives to all schools in the UK. The Breakfast Club at Cherry Fold School is currently financed by the Greggs Foundation which gives schools the funds to provide nutritious food, helping 900 clubs across the UK feed over 62,000 children. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)
  • The Debate: Should we ban smartphones in schools?

    April 2, 2025

    As Keir Starmer calls for schools to pay screen Adolescence, could a smartphone ban be next? We get two writers to argue for and against.

  • Canada great and good raise record £160k for School of Hard Knocks

    February 14, 2025

    Canada’s best, brightest, great and good descended on Threadneedle Street’s M Restaurant as a record £161,000 was raised at the annual School of Hard Knocks Long Lunch. Leading City stalwarts including Champions Cup sponsors Investec were joined by the likes of Firethorn Trust, Clarksons, Falko, England international Andy Gomarsall, LBC’s Nick Ferrari [...]

  • A school reform that could actually help the economy? Teaching financial literacy

    January 31, 2025

    It's not just students who would benefit from school reforms to teach financial literacy, but the UK economy, writes Quentin Nason.

  • Tories push for school smartphone ban to be added to education bill

    January 25, 2025

    The Tories will push for a ban on smartphones in schools to be included in the Government’s education Bill. The Conservatives are tabling an amendment to the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill to end the use of mobile phones and other devices during school days by pupils. It is understood that the Labour government has [...]

  • Disastrous school reform agenda is a solution in search of a problem

    January 9, 2025

    A long time ago I got involved in a battle to help a school leave council control and become an academy. This was shortly after Michael Gove, as education secretary, continued the reforming efforts of his Labour predecessors to inject more choice and freedom into the state education sector. The local council, faced with losing [...]

  • Freedom and parental choice are under threat from school reforms

    January 8, 2025

    The government’s schools bill will undo all the progress that’s been made in English education and had power over our children’s futures to unions and activists, rather than the people who know best, says Mark Lehain English schools really are better now than 35 years ago, by any number of measures. Things improved by design, [...]

  • Youth unemployment is at a decade-high. Ignoring it will breed division

    November 23, 2024

    Being left behind while others prosper creates fertile ground for extremism. So we can't afford to ignore youth unemployment, writes Russell Hobby.

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