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National Education

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Originally published 1838
Authors Henry Edward Manning
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID1646478
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About National Education


This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. . . .

Striking unions to be required to keep schools open

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... National Education Union general secretary Daniel Kebede called the move " shameful"...

Disruption expected at NI schools as teachers strike

Disruption expected at NI schools as teachers strike
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... " Teachers are represented by the Northern Ireland Teachers Council (NITC) which includes five unions - the NASUWT, Irish National Teachers Organisation (INTO), Ulster Teachers Union (UTU), National Education Union (NEU) and NAHT...

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... The Beyond Ofsted inquiry, chaired by former schools minister Lord Jim Knight and funded by the National Education Union, called for a " transformational" alteration to school inspections...

Raac in schools: MPs demand answers over dangerous concrete

Raac in schools: MPs demand answers over dangerous concrete
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... Daniel Kebede, general secretary of the National Education Union, said schools needed " substantial new money to tackle a crisis in school buildings"...

Minimum staff levels demanded in school strikes

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... Daniel Kebede, general secretary of the National Education Union (NEU), said the union strongly opposes the introduction of minimum service levels, adding that the government " has no democratic mandate to implement such an attack on our democratic freedoms"...

Inquiry ordered over England schools funding blunder

Inquiry ordered over England schools funding blunder
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... " The National Education Union said the government is " not paying attention to the crisis in education" adding: " Head teachers have planned for that money and budgets are pared to the bone...

Rishi Sunak considers radical shake-up of A-levels

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Sep 22,2023 2:01 pm

... Daniel Kebede, general secretary of the National Education Union, called it a " sketchy proposal" and said teaching was already facing a " recruitment and retention crisis"...

Unions say hundreds more schools could have Raac

Unions say hundreds more schools could have Raac
Sep 7,2023 10:21 am

... The general secretaries of the National Education Union, NASUWT, NAHT, GMB, Unison and Unite - which collectively represent teachers, heads and support staff - have written a letter to Education Secretary Gillian Keegan, asking six " urgent questions": Raac had been found in 156 schools, 104 of which had been told to close areas of buildings where the concrete had been found and sufficient safety mitigations were not yet in place...

Raac in schools: MPs demand answers over dangerous concrete

Sep 4,2023 8:21 am

By Hazel ShearingEducation correspondent

A " lack of basic information" about work to address dangerous concrete in schools in England is " shocking and disappointing" a report by MPs says.

The Department For Education (DfE) should say how many surveys are yet to be carried out and how many temporary classrooms have been ordered, it said.

The Report comes a month after The Last official list confirmed 214 schools and colleges had reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (Raac).

The DfE rejected the assessment.

A spokeswoman said the government had " taken swift action, responding to new evidence, to identify and support all schools with Raac to ensure the safety of pupils and teachers".

The Public Accounts Committee, which scrutinises The Delivery of public services, warned The List of schools with Raac would grow, and expressed concern that the DfE " does not have a good enough understanding of the risks in schools".

Its report set out 10 recommendations for the DfE, calling on it to:

Dame Meg Hillier , chair of The Committee , said many schools were " still not sure where they stand or whether they'll get The Money to sort out the problems that they've got".

The Report also stressed broader concerns about The State of School Buildings , noting that the DfE was yet to establish whether asbestos was present in around 1,000 schools.

It warned that the government's School Rebuilding Programme was behind schedule and would not be able to help many schools that ultimately need rebuilding.

The condition of schools was worse in the north of England, it added, as well as in rural and coastal areas.

A DfE spokeswoman said questionnaire responses had been gathered from all education settings " in affected areas" and most schools did not have Raac.

" We have been clear that we will do whatever it takes to remove Raac from The School and college estate. We Are working closely with schools with Raac to ensure remediation work is carried out and disruption to learning is minimised, " She Said .

" Our School Rebuilding Programme is continuing to rebuild and refurbish School Buildings in the poorest condition, with The First 400 projects selected ahead of schedule. "

An estimated 700,000 children in England are being taught in unsafe or ageing School Buildings that need major repairs, according to.

The Presence of Raac was thrust into the spotlight at The End of August when the government told affected schools without safety mitigations to shut days before the start of term.

The sudden change in approach left for weeks as head teachers scrambled to make alternative arrangements. The DfE spokeswoman said " only a small handful" of schools taught remotely " for a short period".

The DfE first published a list of affected schools on 19 September. It had suggested it would update it every fortnight, but So Far that has only happened once, on 19 October.

It said 202 of the 214 were now offering full-time face-to-face education.

For some schools, that may mean things are more or less back to normal.

But at others, children are being taught in sports halls, corridors, temporary classrooms including marquees, nearby schools and external buildings.

One parent, whose children's school was waiting for asbestos to be cleared so a Raac survey could be carried out last month,

In September, the DfE suggested 29 schools required temporary classrooms, of which 11 already had them in place, and orders have been made for at least 180 single and 68 double classrooms.

This month, the government awarded three contracts worth up to £35m to providers of temporary classrooms.

Geoff Barton, General Secretary of The Association of School and College Leaders, said it " appears to be taking an eternity to put in place remedial measures".

" We Are gravely concerned that when the government eventually gets around to permanent solutions for affected schools it will do so at the expense of other schools that desperately need upgrading, " He Said .

Paul Whiteman , General Secretary of The Head teachers' union NAHT, said he was " increasingly concerned" especially for exam students in affected schools.

" Many schools are still awaiting temporary classrooms and are having to repurpose dining halls, PE facilities, and spaces for after-school provision and wrap-around care, " He Said .

Daniel Kebede , General Secretary of the National Education Union, said schools needed " substantial New Money to tackle a crisis in School Buildings ".

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Source of news: bbc.com

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