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SATURDAY, 22 FEBRUARY 2025, 16:42

Education

Unpaid internships ‘locking out’ young working-class people from careers

23 January at 02:01 AM, via The Guardian

UK charity calls for positions of four weeks or longer to be banned to help close social mobility gap

Young people from working-class or disadvantaged backgrounds are being “locked out” of careers by unpaid or low-paid internships that benefit middle-class graduates, according to a social mobility charity.

Research by the Sutton Trust found that middle-class graduates made more use of...

Does D.E.I. Help or Hurt Jewish Students?

23 January at 01:23 AM, via New York Times

Some students and professors are questioning whether campus diversity, equity and inclusion offices should do more to combat antisemitism, or whether D.E.I. itself is the problem.

Royal Navy ships mobilised to respond to Russian spy ship in North Sea, defence secretary tells MPs – UK politics live

22 January at 19:45 PM, via The Guardian

John Healey says foreign ship Yantar is in North Sea to gather intelligence on UK’s underwater infrastructure

A new online train ticket retailer backed by the UK government is to be created, the Department for Transport (DfT) has announced, with the aim of simplifying the process of buying tickets from different rail operators. Joanna Partridge has the story.

PMQs is almost with us.

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Badenoch calls schools bill an ‘act of vandalism’ in PMQ exchange with Starmer – video

22 January at 15:43 PM, via The Guardian

Kemi Badenoch called Keir Starmer’s children’s wellbeing and schools bill ‘an act of vandalism’ at PMQs. She said the bill wrecked a cross-party consensus (on academy freedoms) that had lasted for decades. Starmer replied Labour had introduced academies and they would stay. The bill will include measures for the safeguarding and welfare of children as well as policies including breakfast club...

Trump’s plans to axe US education department put marginalized students most at risk, experts warn

21 January at 14:00 PM, via The Guardian

The president can’t fully eliminate the federal agency, but an overhaul could disrupt critical services for students who are of color, low-income or LGBTQ+

For many students of color, access to an equitable education is dependent on the initiatives and programs provided by the Department of Education. Among its various functions, the department provides targeted funding for low-income students,...

Signature moves: are we losing the ability to write by hand?

21 January at 07:00 AM, via The Guardian

We are far more likely to use our hands to type or swipe than pick up a pen. But in the process we are in danger of losing cognitive skills, sensory experience – and a connection to history

Humming away in offices on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon and in the White House is a technology that represents the pragmatism, efficiency and unsentimental nature of American bureaucracy: the autopen. It is...

The financial time bomb facing special educational needs – podcast

21 January at 05:00 AM, via The Guardian

Richard Adams reports on the Send funding cliff edge affecting children and their development

Violet in north London is six years old and loves butterflies and moths. She’s autistic with speech and language difficulties and even before she started nursery, her mother, Tamara, began pursuing extra support from her local authority. Years later, the process of obtaining an educational health care...

Did you solve it? Logicians in a line

20 January at 19:00 PM, via The Guardian

The answer to today’s queueing condundrum

Earlier today I set you the following logic problem, as a retrospective commemoration of World Logic Day. Here it is again with the solution – and a comment about how it relates to the real world.

Queue eye

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Bad Education by Matt Goodwin review – a lapsed liberal’s war on ‘woke’ lecture

20 January at 11:00 AM, via The Guardian

The former politics professor is right to defend free speech in our higher education system, but his argument is undermined by his hysterical tone and lack of nuance

Matt Goodwin is a former professor of politics at the University of Kent who took voluntary severance last year, following a series of controversial posts after the Stockport stabbings. He has said that his departure had nothing to...

Can you solve it? Logicians in a line

20 January at 09:10 AM, via The Guardian

A head-scratching hat puzzle

Today’s puzzle retrospectively commemorates UNESCO’s World Logic Day, which took place last week. (The date, January 14, is both the day Kurt Gödel died and the day Alfred Tarski was born, a calendrical coincidence that links the pre-eminent logicians of the twentieth century.)

It is a logic puzzle and, as is typical for the genre, concerns a group of clever people...

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