Delays hit pupils' test results

More than a million 11 and 14-year-olds in England will get their Sats results late this year because of administrative chaos.

'Tough job' for choice advisers

Government-backed school choice advisers are finding it hard to reach disadvantaged parents, a study says.

Call for better 'global literacy'

Many children in England are being denied a schooling in global events, a survey for an educational charity says.

Call for sex lessons at age four

Two leading sexual health charities call for compulsory sex education for children as young as four.

Jewish school is cleared of bias

A Jewish school is cleared of racially discriminating against an 11-year-old boy it refused to admit.

Sats stress 'blamed on schools'

Ed Balls says schools in England should not be stressing their young pupils over national tests.

School challenge money 'misused'

Head teachers accuse ministers of misallocating public funding to raise standards in England's schools.

Physics names winners and losers

UK physics and astronomy will spend nearly £2bn in the next three years, but some programmes face cuts.

Physics teacher shortage warning

One in four secondary schools in England does not have any specialist physics teachers, says a survey.

Happy Days for birthday boy Balls

Jackie Storer joins the guests as schools secretary Ed Balls celebrates his department's first birthday with "the Fonz".

What went wrong

How the problems with school test results came about

Mike Baker

The options for reforming "easier" A-levels.

School's out

Stretch limos and tiaras hit the UK for Prom Nights

Going up

What makes a school fail and what can be done

E-mail us

How to contact the BBC News website education team

From Parenting

Encouraging them without piling on the pressure

Students reveal domestic violence

A "shocking" level of domestic abuse is revealed by a poll of students in Wales.

Extra money for science centres

Scotland's four science centres receive £250,000 of extra funding, to improve the skills of primary teachers.

E-mail leak of 'degree inflation'

A leaked e-mail shows how university staff are being urged to increase the number of top degree grades.

Watchdog debates exam difficulty

England's exams watchdog wants experts to debate evidence that some subjects are harder to get good grades than others.

Speaking is 'languages weakness'

Speaking skills remain a weakness in learning languages in England's secondary schools, says an Ofsted report.

MPs to probe degree 'fraud'

An influential committee of MPs is to be asked to investigate allegations about degree standards in the UK.

Ex-burglar barred from university

Imperial College rules a teenager can no longer study medicine there because of a "spent" criminal conviction.

Review for early learning goals

Ministers announce a review of plans for new early learning goals for five-year-olds in England, due to start in September.

Rural Diplomas to get extra help

Rural schools in England face extra challenges in delivering the new Diploma, a government report says.

Young people to shine at festival

England's first national school festival designed to celebrate talent in all young people kicks off this week.

Music charge scheme ended

Dumfries and Galloway Council agrees to drop all music tuition charges for school pupils in the region.

Ethnic pupil targets vary widely

Education authorities in England have widely different targets for the attainment of pupils from ethnic groups.

More primaries teach languages

There has been an increase in the number of primary schools in England teaching foreign languages.

Should employers doubt Diplomas?

Mike Baker says that Diplomas need to convince employers, rather than appeal to academic pupils.

Students: Customers or learners?

Mike Baker warns that universities' "wall of silence" over standards will not help their long-term interests.

Can naming and shaming help schools?

Mike Baker asks whether the policy of naming and shaming can help turn around failing schools.

School tests: who takes what

A guide to the varied pattern of testing around the UK.

School's out as teachers march

Thousands of teachers take to the streets to march over demands for a better pay deal.

Where learning strategy takes us

BBC News website education editor Gary Eason assesses which way the wind is blowing.

What is BBC News School Report?

Find out more about the project which motivates secondary students around the UK to make and broadcast their own news.