Education

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Urban, Jewish and intellectual: Rachel Wolf, director of the New Schools Network, has already worked for the London Mayor Boris Johnson and the Shadow Education Minister Michael Gove

Time for change: How a young woman plans to shake up the school system

Rachel Wolf has helped shape the Tories' policy and has already set up her own think tank. Is she the face of the next Conservative decade?

Inside Schools

Steve McCormack: Why do we spend so much money on schools?

Thursday, 12 November 2009

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?

Niel McLean: Technology can bridge the gap between parents and schools

Thursday, 5 November 2009

Parental engagement is vital to a child’s learning and known to help raise attainment. Good communication with schools enables parents to learn more about their child’s progress, lesson plans and grades whilst also helping to identify any development or performance issues early on.

Leading Article: We need a crackdown

Thursday, 5 November 2009

Ian Craig, the Schools Adjudicator, is a man on a mission. He wants to get the message out to parents that lying to secure a place for your child in a popular school is wicked. It is a form of "theft", he says, because it deprives another child of a place, and we should be saying wherever we can that this is not right.

Tackling the North-South divide: How a northern sport is migrating to schools in the South

Thursday, 5 November 2009

It was once a sport strictly confined to the toughest mining towns, but rugby league is now firing the imaginations of school pupils south of Watford, reports Steve McCormack

Why has the popular head of a Catholic school in west London been suspended?

Thursday, 29 October 2009

Cardinal Wiseman School in Ealing, west London, is proud of its headteacher. Its website trumpets a "track record of outstanding achievement" beginning in September 1997 when "a new headteacher, Mr Patrick, arrives." The school's GCSE results in 1998 and 1999 were the best it had known. In 1999 it was named the second most improved school in London by the Times Educational Supplement and one of the country's best technology schools by the Technology Colleges Trust. The next year Ofsted called it "outstanding". And so on, pages of it, right up to another "outstanding" from Ofsted in 2008 and one from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Westminster this year.

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Columnist Comments

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Matthew Norman: Cowell is a God

He has no need to play God. On Greek mythological lines, he is one

adrian_hamilton

Adrian Hamilton: Lies, damn lies and Berlin speeches

We're back to propping up rotten regimes. Stability is more important than values

christina_patterson

Christina Patterson: Why it's hard to be a blonde in the City

A big, fat, dark, ugly man who complained about their intelligence

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