Inside Education
Starting at 22, Britons have talent
Britons have got talent – it just doesn’t emerge until they are 22, says a report published today.
Steve McCormack: Why do we spend so much money on schools?
Like all public sectors, the education world is holding its breath to see where and when the spending axe will fall. The ubiquitous question: who will suffer when the funding tap – free flowing since the early Blair days – is squeezed? But I have a different question. Are we, in our blinkered British bubble, deluding ourselves in assuming that less money will necessarily mean a less effective education system? And the reverse applies equally. Does more money necessarily mean more learning?
- Education Quandary: I am very physical in how I teach drama. But my new headteacher has told me to change the way I work. Do I really have to?
- Time for change: How a young woman plans to shake up the school system
- Niel McLean: Technology can bridge the gap between parents and schools
- Leading Article: We need a crackdown
New chapter: How college are helping to change people's lives
The upcoming Colleges Week will highlight the many benefits that college life offers.
Leading Article: Good start for fees review
Lord Mandelson has managed to secure an impressive line-up for his review of university funding, which is expected to recommended that top-up fees be increased. Lord Browne, who spent his life in BP, rising from lowly graduate recruit to CEO, is widely admired for his expertise and will be ably supported, among others, by Sir Michael Barber, the former head of Tony Blair's delivery unit, the economist Diane Coyle, formerly of this newspaper, and Professor David Eastwood, Vice-Chancellor of Birmingham University and one of the cleverest minds in higher education. Moreover he has managed to keep the NUS happy by including a young person, Ranjay Naik, who used be on the English Secondary Students Association.
Most popular
Read
1 The 50 Best Christmas Gifts for Men
2 The 50 Best Christmas Gifts for Women
3 Renouncing Islamism: To the brink and back again
5 Shortlisted: Football managers who never get the job new
6 Ain't life fadtastic? The A to Z of fads
7 The dirtiest players in football
9 Anti-depressant hailed as 'Viagra for women' new
10 Wenger to put faith in Eduardo after van Persie injury new
11 Exposed: the most intimate secret of erotic blogger Belle de Jour
12 Calvin Harris: 'I made an idiot of myself for the good of the nation' new
13 Heart-throbs! Hollywood's leading leading men
Emailed
1 Renouncing Islamism: To the brink and back again
2 Nick Clegg: Cancel the Queen's Speech – and save democracy
3 Plastic chemicals 'may feminise boys' brains'
4 Boxing: Pacquiao savagery paves way for Mayweather super-fight
5 Catholic Church needs more Internet savvy: bishop
6 Anti-depressant hailed as 'Viagra for women' new
7 Paul Collier: History is repeated as tragedy in the new scramble for Africa
8 Surge in the price of oil is a fresh threat to recovery
11 62,006 - the number killed in the 'war on terror'
12 Exposed: the most intimate secret of erotic blogger Belle de Jour
13 War in Afghanistan: Not in our name
Commented
1Renouncing Islamism: To the brink and back again
2Bruce Anderson: Why the public are wrong over our mission in Afghanistan
3'Cancel the Queen's speech ? and save democracy'
4Nick Clegg: Don't waste our time... bring forward real reform
5BNP leader to stand against minister
6Education officials spent £10m on first-class fares
7British soldiers sexually abused us, claim Iraqis
8Mary Wakefield: Sex education classes are the last thing young children need
9After 50 years, the 'lost innocents' shipped from home win apology
10Welcome to Club Bounce: Where the big ? and beautiful ? people go
Columnist Comments
• Bruce Anderson: Why the public are wrong over our mission in Afghanistan
The West must be seen as a reliable foe
• Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: Libel laws silence our democracy
Most journalists have to accept severe limits on what we can say
• Philip Hensher: Computers have got to learn about grammar
Some of the things we are told in school are just terrible rules
