Skip to Content

SATURDAY, 21 DECEMBER 2024, 13:36

Education

Florence’s 16th-century Vasari corridor opens to public for first time

Yesterday at 14:30 PM, via The Guardian

Elevated passageway connecting Uffizi Galleries with Pitti Palace was for centuries used only by those with power

Over history, dukes, dictators and Europe’s illustrious elite have walked through the Vasari corridor, a narrow, 750-metre-long elevated passageway crossing the Arno River in Florence.

Now visitors to the Tuscan capital can follow in their footsteps when the newly restored landmark,...

Ex-pupil wins damages over face-down restraint at Oxfordshire special school

Yesterday at 14:03 PM, via The Guardian

Boy was restrained face down by staff and others placed a towel around the door of his room to stop him leaving

A former student who was repeatedly restrained face down and once imprisoned for nearly five hours at a special school has been awarded £18,900 in damages.

The father of the student, who is now 25 and cannot be named for legal reasons, launched a claim against Mulberry Bush school in...

University bans on big oil firms at recruitment fairs rise by 30%

Yesterday at 11:32 AM, via The Guardian

Survey finds post-1992 universities leading the way on sustainability and ethics

More universities are banning fossil fuel companies from recruitment fairs in a sign of the sector’s shrinking social licence among young people.

The annual survey of sustainability and ethics in higher education found there has been a 30% rise in the number of institutions stopping fossil fuel companies taking...

The last primary school in Soho

Yesterday at 08:00 AM, via BBC News

Soho’s last primary school is battling to stay open as families move away from the area due to costs.

Inquiry to look at ‘huge task’ of special educational needs reform in England

Yesterday at 08:00 AM, via The Guardian

Chair of committee of MPs, Helen Hayes, says current Send ‘deep crisis’ is neither sustainable nor acceptable

Parents frustrated by the multiple failings of England’s special educational needs and disabilities (Send) system have been warned it is not realistic to expect reform to happen quickly, as MPs announced another inquiry into the crisis.

MPs on the cross-party education committee in...

Allow teachers to fine parents over pupils’ bad behaviour, says Tony Blair’s thinktank

Yesterday at 02:01 AM, via The Guardian

Report argues for more powers, but teachers say this could strain already fraught relationships with parents

Ministers should give teachers the power to fine parents if they do not engage with the school to tackle an “epidemic” of bad behaviour, according to the thinktank led by Tony Blair.

Educators should have the same legal powers they have over non-attendance to compel parents to turn up to...

Nigeria: Minister Urges States to Prioritise Stem, Tivet Education

Thursday at 12:40 PM, via AllAfrica

[Leadership] The Minister of Education, Dr. Maruf Tunji Alausa, has urged State Commissioners of Education across the country to prioritize the development and integration of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) and TVET (Technical and Vocational Education and Training) programmes within their educational frameworks.

‘Flexi-schooling’ isn’t the answer for time-pressed parents – but something has to give | Emma Brockes

Thursday at 12:00 PM, via The Guardian

Kids aren’t mini executives who need to be chauffeured between school and extracurricular activities

Every few years, the grind of modern life inspires calls for a radical rethink. We have seen this most recently in Iceland, where the rollout of a 35-hour, four-day working week has shown signs of success, and more broadly with the conversation around remote working. For obvious reasons, these...

  1. Pages:
  2. 1
  3. 2
  4. 3
  5. 4
  6. 5
  7. ...
  8. 20