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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. |
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'Tough job' for choice advisers Government-backed school choice advisers are finding it hard to reach disadvantaged parents, a study says. |
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Call for better 'global literacy' Many children in England are being denied a schooling in global events, a survey for an educational charity says. |
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Call for sex lessons at age four Two leading sexual health charities call for compulsory sex education for children as young as four. |
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Jewish school is cleared of bias A Jewish school is cleared of racially discriminating against an 11-year-old boy it refused to admit. |
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Sats stress 'blamed on schools' Ed Balls says schools in England should not be stressing their young pupils over national tests. |
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School challenge money 'misused' Head teachers accuse ministers of misallocating public funding to raise standards in England's schools. |
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Physics names winners and losers UK physics and astronomy will spend nearly £2bn in the next three years, but some programmes face cuts. |
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Physics teacher shortage warning One in four secondary schools in England does not have any specialist physics teachers, says a survey. |
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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". |
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What went wrong How the problems with school test results came about |
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Mike Baker The options for reforming "easier" A-levels. |
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School's out Stretch limos and tiaras hit the UK for Prom Nights |
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Going up What makes a school fail and what can be done |
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E-mail us How to contact the BBC News website education team |
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From Parenting Encouraging them without piling on the pressure |
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Students reveal domestic violence A "shocking" level of domestic abuse is revealed by a poll of students in Wales. |
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Extra money for science centres Scotland's four science centres receive £250,000 of extra funding, to improve the skills of primary teachers. |
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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. |
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Watchdog debates exam difficulty England's exams watchdog wants experts to debate evidence that some subjects are harder to get good grades than others. |
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Speaking is 'languages weakness' Speaking skills remain a weakness in learning languages in England's secondary schools, says an Ofsted report. |
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MPs to probe degree 'fraud' An influential committee of MPs is to be asked to investigate allegations about degree standards in the UK. |
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Ex-burglar barred from university Imperial College rules a teenager can no longer study medicine there because of a "spent" criminal conviction. |
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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. |
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Rural Diplomas to get extra help Rural schools in England face extra challenges in delivering the new Diploma, a government report says. |
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Young people to shine at festival England's first national school festival designed to celebrate talent in all young people kicks off this week. |
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Music charge scheme ended Dumfries and Galloway Council agrees to drop all music tuition charges for school pupils in the region. |
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Ethnic pupil targets vary widely Education authorities in England have widely different targets for the attainment of pupils from ethnic groups. |
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More primaries teach languages There has been an increase in the number of primary schools in England teaching foreign languages. |
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Should employers doubt Diplomas? Mike Baker says that Diplomas need to convince employers, rather than appeal to academic pupils. |
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Students: Customers or learners? Mike Baker warns that universities' "wall of silence" over standards will not help their long-term interests. |
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Can naming and shaming help schools? Mike Baker asks whether the policy of naming and shaming can help turn around failing schools. |
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School tests: who takes what A guide to the varied pattern of testing around the UK. |
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School's out as teachers march Thousands of teachers take to the streets to march over demands for a better pay deal. |
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Where learning strategy takes us BBC News website education editor Gary Eason assesses which way the wind is blowing. |
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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. |