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      The Guardian view on the other influencers: a golden era for science education | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Sunday, 29 September - 17:25 · 1 minute

    YouTube isn’t always a stupefaction engine. Curious children and other autodidacts have unrivalled access to knowledge

    With highbrow content but defiantly low production values, the Numberphile YouTube channel might be considered the antithesis of the platform’s biggest successes. While stars such as the controversial MrBeast orchestrate elaborate stunts and giveaways, Numberphile videos feature mathematicians talking through complex concepts at length. There are occasional questions or prompts from the unseen cameraman. The props are usually a sheet of brown paper and a marker pen. The closest the episodes get to clickbait are titles such as Tau vs Pi Smackdown or The Lazy Way to Cut Pizza; a typical video is More on Bertrand’s Paradox, or An Amazing Thing About 276.

    None of this sounds like catnip for young viewers. Yet since it launched in 2011, the series has become a cult hit. Eleven million people have now watched the physics professor Roger Bowley discuss Kaprekar’s Constant . The Institute of Mathematics and its Applications and the London Mathematical Society have just awarded Numberphile’s creator, Brady Haran, the Zeeman medal for the communication of mathematics. As the citation notes, the channel has material for everyone from primary school kids to graduate students. It’s a fair bet that Numberphile – along with similar channels such as Stand-up Maths and 3Blue1Brown – has inspired at least some of the record 100,000-plus children who took maths A-level in England this year.

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      Students and staff pay the price for university funding crisis | Letters

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Sunday, 29 September - 15:53

    Readers respond to an article by Peter Mandelson in which he calls for student fees to be linked to inflation

    For more than 15 years, university students and staff have borne the brunt of a broken system. Tuition fees helped turn higher education into a quasi-market, transforming students into indebted consumers and staff into precarious workers. Lord Mandelson’s support for Britain’s universities is welcome, but it is unfortunate that he appears relaxed about making students and staff pay the price – yet again – for patching up the sector’s finances ( Universities are in a hole: linking student fees to inflation is the fairest way forward, 25 September ).

    Not only does Mandelson suggest students are penalised with tuition fee hikes, he takes aim at the student-staff ratio, suggesting it is much too low. This is hard to interpret as anything other than a call for job cuts, which Mandelson frames in the cynical phrase of the hour as “tough choices”.

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      The Guardian view on the teacher shortage: flexibility and career breaks could help

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 19 September - 17:53 · 1 minute

    To tackle staff shortages, jobs in schools and other public services must be made more attractive

    Without teachers, schools can’t do their job. Recognising the problems caused by shortages, Labour made the recruitment of 6,500 new ones a key plank of its education offer to voters in England – one funded by VAT on private school fees. Now a report from the charity Teach First, advocating flexibility and an entitlement to career breaks, attempts to flesh out what improved working conditions in English schools might look like. Given the difficulties faced by recruiters and the alarming drop-off rate – one in four new teachers last less than three years – it is imperative that ministers pay attention to such efforts and come up with a plan.

    The 5.5% pay rise agreed this summer should make a difference – although not to teachers in further education colleges, who have once again been left out. But the stress associated with teaching, as well as the pay, is putting off potential entrants, according to a survey of 16- to 24-year-olds. So is the sense that school spending overall is too low. Some heads are already trying out giving staff more time to prepare lessons and the chance to work from home. One academy chain, Dixons, has introduced a nine-day fortnight. Another measure that was dropped by the last government , and ought to be revived, is the offer of paid sabbaticals – to support professional development and incentivise longer careers in teaching.

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      First ‘globally recognised’ music exam for Sikh sacred music launched in UK

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 19 September - 16:11


    South Asian string instruments such as the dilruba and sarangi will get eight grade syllabus and exam system

    A music examination in Sikh sacred music, thought to be the first of its kind, will launch in the UK this week in a move described as an “important step” in diversifying music education.

    The examination, introduced by the Music Teachers’ Board (MTB) on Friday, will see the music known as Kirtan become part of the universal eight grade examination system.

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      Swedish children to start school a year earlier in move away from play

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 19 September - 04:00

    Compulsory preschool year for six-year-olds to be replaced with extra year in primary school from 2028

    Children in Sweden are to start school at six years old from 2028, a year earlier than at present, in an overhaul of the country’s education system that signals a switch from play-based teaching for younger children.

    The government has announced plans to replace a compulsory preschool year for six-year-olds known as förskoleklass with an additional year in grundskola (primary school).

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      ‘A brave new world for educators’: teachers respond to nine-day-fortnight proposals

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 18 September - 23:01 · 3 minutes

    Plans to resolve education recruitment crisis would shorten hours and allow some home working. What do those on the ground think?

    Schools in England are facing a recruitment crisis, with burnt-out teachers quitting and new graduates wanting jobs that offer greater flexibility and less stress.

    In response, Dixons academies trust is to allow teachers to work a nine-day fortnight, while the Department for Education says schools can let staff take their free periods in blocks to work from home. We asked teachers and school leaders if those innovations would help solve the crisis.

    Since I qualified four years ago, I have seen half the people I qualified with leave the profession. That’s a travesty and unless we have innovative, flexible thinking in managers and they stop treating teachers like workhorses, the situation will get worse.

    Anything that reduces our workload and allows us to plan better and do all the admin associated with teaching would be welcome. A typical day for me is 11 hours long, starting at 7am and finishing at 6pm. I get a half hour for lunch and half an hour early break every day. But those two half hours are often working – meeting students, planning and phoning parents. We also have to do four breaktime duties over a two-week period. That means we have in effect about an hour and a half free to eat and talk to colleagues every week.

    It’s a really noble ambition of the DfE to look at ways for teachers to use their time more flexibly. The idea that you can work from home where possible is a strong one but the reality is less rosy, because it means the pool of teachers who can cover for their colleagues is thinner, and the cost of supply teachers is astronomical.

    The schools looking at timetabling to release staff – it will be interesting to see how that plays with parents, and if it means increasing working hours or online teaching.

    I’m attracted by the idea of teachers working a nine-day fortnight, especially the potential for teachers to be well rested and do a good job, and for teaching to be more competitive with other careers. I think it’s innovative, so I’ll be very interested to see how it works.

    One of the issues over retention is “stressload” rather than workload, and that’s exacerbated by lack of autonomy. Teachers already work significantly longer hours than contracted, and they get very little autonomy over their time. If they are having a bad day they can’t go for a walk because they’ve got a classroom full of kids to look after. What I would definitely say is that stress, workload and poor behaviour are the things we really need to address.

    It’s great to see some creative thinking coming through the sector as we all work to grapple the challenges of recruitment and retention.

    Many of our schools enable staff to work from home during the week, and we have recently introduced individual learning accounts which allocate £100,000 of professional development to every principal in our network of schools. In addition, our school leaders are eligible for sabbaticals after five years of service with us.

    All of these are initiatives that we should be exploring, particularly for the younger generation of teachers who are more likely to demand a more flexible approach to working.

    Dixons have stolen the march on a number of us but that might well be because of their size – they have the ability to manage it. Finances are the issue for most institutions. But it’s a brave new world and I imagine this is going to be the new way for educators to look at things. I’m following the approach and I will see what the outcomes are.

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      ‘Incredibly disheartening’ decline in special needs pupil attainment in England

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 18 September - 23:01

    Pupils with Send slipping further behind peers in reading, writing and maths despite teaching and legislation gains

    Children with special needs in England have slipped further behind their peers in reading, writing and maths, despite recent legislation and advances in teaching making their education a high priority.

    School leaders described the results as “incredibly disheartening”, and called for better specialist support and funding to avoid the collapse of England’s special needs education system.

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      Teachers in England offered lie-ins to make job more appealing

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 18 September - 23:01

    Other perks including nine-day fortnight and more planning time at home offered to attract recruits

    Teachers in England are being offered a range of incentives to make the job more appealing, including two free periods a week to give them a lie-in, a nine-day fortnight and more planning time at home to help with work-life balance.

    An escalating crisis in teacher recruitment and retention is forcing schools and academy trusts to come up with novel ways to attract new recruits into the profession and keep experienced staff in front of classes.

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