British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
Articles by this Author
Parents 'want texts from schools'
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published Yesterday
- Daily EdNews , K-12 , International Headlines
- Unrated
Parents want more information from schools by e-mail and text, a survey suggests. One in 12 of the 1,493 parents polled by government education technology agency Becta said schools kept them informed using these methods.
Board option for failing children
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published Yesterday
- Daily EdNews , K-12 , International Headlines
- Unrated

More children in danger of going off the rails or being taken into care could be offered places at boarding schools funded by the state. Ministers have pledged at least £10 million over the next three years to help expand the state boarding system.
Free cook books for 11-year-olds
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 09/10/2008
- Daily EdNews , K-12 , International Headlines
- Unrated

All 11-year-olds in England will be able to receive a free cookbook under a programme aimed at tackling obesity.
Social change 'not academic role'
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 09/10/2008
- K-12 , Higher Education , Daily EdNews , International Headlines
- Unrated

The head of Cambridge University has criticised the government over pressure on elite institutions to take more students from disadvantaged homes. Vice-chancellor Alison Richard said universities were there to educate and lead research and not act as "engines for promoting social justice".
Sats firm apologises for problems
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 09/10/2008
- Daily EdNews , K-12 , International Headlines
- Unrated

ETS - the company behind the "Sats shambles" - apologises, but puts much of the blame on the exams body which employed it.
Help with college hardship money
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 09/8/2008
- Daily EdNews , Higher Education , International Headlines
- Unrated

England's college funding body steps into the row over maintenance allowances. Problems at the firm running education maintenance allowances mean 150,000 youngsters are not getting them. They are entitled to means-tested payments of up to £30 a week, to help to keep them studying.
Balls hints at end to Sats tests
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 09/7/2008
- Daily EdNews , K-12 , International Headlines
- Unrated

The Sats tests could end next year and be replaced by individual level tests, Schools Secretary Ed Balls has hinted. The national tests are taken by about one million children aged seven, 11 and 14 across England each May, but this year's marking was a "fiasco", he said.
Holiday key to school standards?
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 09/5/2008
- Daily EdNews , Behavioral Health , K-12 , International Headlines
- Unrated

Mike Baker wonders if having school holidays earlier might make pupils do better. As the new school year began in most parts of England, Wales and Northern Ireland this week, parents, students and school staff fell into one of two camps.
More state pupils enter Cambridge
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 09/4/2008
- Daily EdNews , Higher Education , International Headlines
- Unrated

The proportion of new Cambridge University students from state schools jumped 7% last year. For the year 2007/08, maintained sector admissions stood at 59% - the highest total since 1981, the university said.
Cambridge drops law entrance test
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 09/3/2008
- Daily EdNews , Higher Education , International Headlines
- Unrated
Cambridge University is no longer going to use the full LNat admissions test from next year.
School meal guidelines tightened
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 09/3/2008
- Daily EdNews , K-12 , International Headlines
- Unrated

School meals in England's primary schools are subject to even tighter guidelines from this month. Caterers have drawn up new menus which conform to strict nutritional guidelines on the amounts of vitamins and minerals young children need.
New pupils have to stay until 17
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 09/2/2008
- Daily EdNews , K-12 , International Headlines
- Unrated

Children starting secondary schools in England this week are the first legally required to stay in education until they are 17.
Plea over poor school gym halls
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 08/31/2008
- Daily EdNews , K-12 , International Headlines
- Unrated
Education chiefs say they cannot tackle the poor state of gym facilities in Scottish schools until buildings are upgraded. The Association of Directors of Education has spoken out after an inspectors' report was critical of PE facilities in many primary schools.
Weak teachers 'put off pupils'
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 08/31/2008
- Daily EdNews , K-12 , International Headlines
- Unrated

Poor teachers can put children off learning and are too difficult to sack, the chief inspector of schools warns. Christine Gilbert, head of the Office for Standards in Education (Ofsted), told the Sunday Telegraph pupils were being let down by inadequate teachers.
Schools start cancer vaccinations
- By British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (UK)
- Published 08/31/2008
- Daily EdNews , Behavioral Health , K-12 , International Headlines
- Unrated
Scottish schoolgirls are to become the first in the UK to be vaccinated against cervical cancer. Schools in the Lanarkshire, Tayside, Grampian and Western Isles NHS areas are to begin vaccinating 12 and 13-year-old girls from this week.

