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TUESDAY, 07 MAY 2024, 09:59

Education

Zimbabwe: Schools Defy Govt Directive On Holiday Lessons

17 April at 17:50 PM, via AllAfrica

[The Herald] Some schools, especially private ones, have defied a Government directive banning holiday lessons and are charging learners for classes they are conducting during the holidays.

Football-based mentoring found to boost wellbeing for at-risk pupils in England

17 April at 17:28 PM, via The Guardian

Charity that uses football to help pupils build relationships found to improve happiness in Greater Manchester project

Intensive mentoring for troubled schoolchildren using football kickabouts has significantly increased wellbeing, delivering happiness boosts equivalent to an unemployed adult getting a job, a study has found.

A project involving more than 2,000 pupils in dozens of secondary...

Columbia University president testifies at congressional antisemitism hearing

17 April at 16:45 PM, via The Guardian

Nemat Shafik will be grilled by House committee in exchanges that promise to become heated and confrontational

Allegations of antisemitism at a top US university are being heard in a widely anticipated congressional hearing on Wednesday, amid continuing unrest on American college campuses over Israel’s war in Gaza.

The president of Columbia University, Nemat Shafik, along with senior...

Higher education was easily accessible to disabled people during Covid. Why are we being shut out now? | Rosie Anfilogoff

17 April at 14:00 PM, via The Guardian

The pandemic showed that remote learning is effective. It’s absurd that universities are going back to processes that exclude us

Rosie Anfilogoff is the winner of the 2024 Hugo Young Award (19-25 age category) recognising young talent in political opinion writing

My route to university was never going to be simple. While my friends were flicking through university brochures and choosing Ucas...

#BringBackOurGirls kept global attention on Nigeria’s stolen Chibok girls. It also gave some a brighter future | Helon Habila

17 April at 09:00 AM, via The Guardian

The campaign that came to prominence when 276 schoolgirls were kidnapped from their classes in 2014 has had an impact beyond its first rallying cries

It was a kidnapping that changed Nigeria’s image internationally. For many, the first inkling of what was going on in the country’s north-east was after April 2014, when 276 girls were snatched from a school in Chibok by the Islamist militia...

Reading Lessons by Carol Atherton review – breathing new life into old texts

17 April at 08:30 AM, via The Guardian

How one teacher wrestles meaning and relevance from classics of English literature

It is a truth universally acknowledged that the books you studied at school are the ones that stick with you for ever. In my case it was Pride and Prejudice, but for you it might have been Macbeth or Malorie Blackman’s Noughts and Crosses. These are the texts you know by heart because, once upon a time,...

South Africa: South African Study Shows the Power of Sharing Daily Experiences for Teachers to Learn How to Include All Learners

17 April at 06:47 AM, via AllAfrica

[The Conversation Africa] Globally, more than 258 million children and young people between the ages of 6 and 17 are not in school. In South Africa, the figure stands at 232,000 for children aged between 7 and 17. The main reasons they’re not attending school are related to the quality of education, financial constraints, disability and child or teenage pregnancy.

Michaela school will keep its prayer ban – but as a Muslim teacher I know it doesn’t have to be this way

16 April at 18:40 PM, via The Guardian

Kids pausing their football so a friend can pray; theology chats over lunch – I’ve seen the richness that religious diversity brings to school life

A Muslim student at Michaela community school in Brent, north-west London, has lost a high court challenge to the school’s ban on prayer rituals. As a Muslim secondary schoolteacher, I have to say I am disappointed – but not surprised.

The appeal...

Tunisia: Tunisian AI Institute to Be Set Up Next Academic Year (Minister)

16 April at 17:25 PM, via AllAfrica

[Tunis Afrique Presse] Tunis — “The Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research is working to set up Tunisia’s first artificial intelligence (AI) institute at the University of Tunis, covering all training fields, at the start of the next academic year if the necessary preparations proceed as planned,” Higher Education and Scientific Research Minister Moncef Boukthir said on Tuesday.

Liberia: U.S. Embassy Dedicates ‘American Shelf’ At AMEU

16 April at 17:04 PM, via AllAfrica

[Liberian Observer] The United States Embassy near Monrovia has inaugurated a new educational resource called the “American Shelf” at the African Methodist Episcopal University (AMEU) near Monrovia. This initiative, launched on April 11, 2024, aims to promote knowledge sharing, cultural exchange, and innovation between Liberia and the United States.

Top London school’s ban on prayer rituals not unlawful, high court rules

16 April at 11:54 AM, via The Guardian

Michaela community school, run by former government social mobility tsar Katharine Birbalsingh, introduced ban last March

A ban on prayer rituals at one of the highest-performing state schools in England, famous for its strict discipline code and high-profile headteacher, was not unlawful, a high court judge has ruled.

The case against Michaela community school in Brent, north-west London, was...

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