News Review and Commentary

MINISTER CALLS FOR LUNCHTIME LOCK-IN AT SCHOOLS TO STOP RUSH FOR CHIPPIE

7/6/2008 10:49:00 AM

 

The Observer 6 July

 Shocking new research into schoolchildren's lunch habits adds to concerns over obesity .A gaggle of schoolchildren at the chip shop is a common scene in Britain's high streets - but it may not be for much longer. The children's minister, Kevin Brennan, has called for secondary pupils under the age of 16 to be locked in school grounds at lunchtime to stop them from stocking up on sweets, fizzy drinks and takeaways. The proposal comes as damning new research reveals the extent to which children pass through school gates to buy large quantities of food that is high in fat and sugar. Some pupils left school to buy junk food more than 11 times a week. With soaring numbers of children now dangerously overweight, Brennan said one answer was to keep millions of pupils inside the gates. 'Some schools have a stay-on-site policy for 11- to 16-year-olds but lets the sixth form go off-site. I'm very strongly supportive of that approach. I would like to see more schools operating some sort of stay-on-site policy because its advantages are shown not just in improved uptake [of healthy school lunches], but also improved behaviour and community relationships.' But any plans to lock children in were attacked as Orwellian by parents yesterday, while headteachers argued that it was not possible to police pupil movement. 'Much as schools would like to keep children on site at lunch time, the number of exits in some - as many as 20 - make this almost impossible,' said John Dunford, general-secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders. Andy Hibberd, co-founder of the Parent Organisation, a support group, said the proposals should be opposed and blocked. 'It is very "nanny state-ist", totally unworkable and impractical,' he said. 'It is taking away parental choice and treating older children as babies.'Observer

General

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GCSES V O-LEVELS, LET THE BATTLE BEGIN

7/6/2008 10:12:00 AM

 

The Sunday Times 6 July

 

A book of old O-level questions stumped this year’s bright pupils

 For years critics have grumbled that GCSEs are too easy. Standards have fallen and exams have been dumbed down – but are they right? This month a new book, called simply The O Level Book: Genuine Exam Questions from Yesteryear, is published. It contains O-level papers dating back to the 1950s. In the foreword, Martin Stephen, high master of one of Britain’s top boys’ schools, St Paul’s in London, writes: “Back then O-levels were proud to be difficult. It was a stinkingly hard, fact-based exam.” To test out – once and for all – whether GCSEs really are easier than the old-style O-levels we asked a group of five GCSE pupils at Brighton College, East Sussex, to take maths and English papers from the book under test conditions. The results were striking. Not one of the five teenagers is expected to achieve lower than a B grade in the GCSEs they completed a few days ago and several of our guinea pigs are predicted to score a string of As and A*s. Yet according to Louise Kenway, Brighton College’s deputy headmistress, who marked the O-level tests they sportingly sat for us on Wednesday, only two of the five pupils achieved a pass mark in the two-hour O-level maths paper; the rest failed. They did a little better in the 90-minute English-language test. All five teenagers passed the English paper, but, says Kenway, none would have scored a grade 1, the highest O-level grade possible, which is supposed to be equivalent to an A* at GCSE. Sun Times

Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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'COMPLETE SHAMBLES' AS TEMPS ARE DRAFTED IN TO SORT OUT SCHOOL TESTS

'COMPLETE SHAMBLES' AS TEMPS ARE DRAFTED IN TO SORT OUT SCHOOL TESTS

7/6/2008 11:04:00 AM

 

The Observer 6 July

 Temporary staff employed to help solve the crisis over the marking of Sats tests described yesterday how the system had descended into a 'Monty Pythonesque' shambles. One man, employed to staff helplines, recounted a string of horror stories from markers and teachers shocked by the number of papers that were going missing in this year's key stage 2 tests. Even on Friday, three days before children across England were supposed to receive their results, he was fielding calls from schools saying that boxes filled with unmarked scripts had just been delivered. Markers were also calling in to complain about the level of disorganisation. In one case, a woman who was supposed to mark English papers described how a box of maths papers had been delivered to a neighbouring house. As the family were on holiday, the papers had been left outside in the rain for more than a week. In another case, a man tried to send back the scripts he had marked, only to have them returned to him twice. 'Other markers said that they had been sent 450 scripts the day before the official deadline and refused to mark them,' said one man from north-west London who was employed as a temp by the National Assessment Agency, part of the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, to help sort out the problems.Observer

Lead Story | Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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BOSS OF DRUG FIRM BEHIND CERVICAL CANCER JABS FOR SCHOOLGIRLS IS ON BOARD OF OFSTED

7/6/2008 11:05:00 AM

 

Mail on Sunday 6 July

 Paul Blackburn, a senior vice president at GlaxoSmithKline, has been appointed to the board of OfstedSchools Secretary Ed Balls is at the centre of a controversy over the appointment of a top executive with a drugs company to the board of education watchdog Ofsted.Paul Blackburn, 53, is a senior vice-president at GlaxoSmithKline, which is being sued by hundreds of parents and patients who claim its drugs have caused suicide and psychosis.His appointment came two weeks before the company won a reported £100million contract to vaccinate all schoolgirls of 12 and 13 against the sexually transmitted virus linked to cervical cancer. Family campaigners argued that the jabs would ‘normalise’ childhood sex.Mr Blackburn’s new role has been met with such disquiet that one childcare expert boycotted an Ofsted conference on Friday, and urged others to make a similar stand.Announcing the appointment, Mr Balls, one of Gordon Brown’s closest advisers, said Mr Blackburn had a ‘passion’ for helping children.But critics fear GSK’s place on the Ofsted board has given it instant moral authority and has commercially strengthened its position at a time when children are being targeted by the pharmaceutical industry.MOS 6 July

General | Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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