News Review and Commentary

HEADS WARN OF TEST MARKS MISTAKES

7/9/2008 6:37:00 AM

 

BBC 8 July

Test delay: Heads are saying "the row is only beginning"Head teachers are reporting "widespread problems" with the quality of marking in the delayed Sats results being returned to schools in England. "The row is only beginning," says Mick Brookes, leader of the National Association of Head Teachers. Mr Brookes is urging heads to give parents the assessments of teachers, as well as any disputed test results. The National Assessment Agency has given assurances that the marking will be as good as last year's. The NAHT head teachers' union says that schools are reporting concerns about the reliability of the marking in scripts being returned.        BBC

Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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CHILDREN SHOULD LEARN TO SPEAK BEFORE THEY LEARN TO READ SAYS REVIEW

CHILDREN SHOULD LEARN TO SPEAK BEFORE THEY LEARN TO READ SAYS REVIEW

7/9/2008 6:35:00 AM

 

The Times 9 July

 The heavy emphasis on teaching children to read and write in nursery and reception classes is preventing teachers from focusing on more important aspects of early childhood development, such as speaking and listening skills, the author of a major government report has warned. John Bercow, a Conservative MP and author of a report on speech, language and communication (SLC) needs, said that many very young children needed help in speaking and listening to reduce the worrying number of pupils unable to string a coherent sentence together by the time they started school. “For too long communication skills have been the poor relation by comparison with literacy. This is a grave error because communication is the key life skill from which all others follow. To date, communication has been undervalued and down played and too little recognised, we need to raise awareness of its importance,” he said. Mr Bercow was speaking as the government announced a £40 million programme, called Every Child a Talker, which will provide training to help nursery staff identify and support children with speaking and language problems at an early age. A further £12 million is being set aside to help implement the recommendations of Mr Bercow’s report, which was commissioned amid concerns that too many children were starting school at the age of five unable to respond to instructions or express themselves. Times

Lead Story | General | Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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YOUNGSTERS KNOW THEIR DALEKS BUT CAN’T TELL A BEE FROM A WASP

7/9/2008 6:36:00 AM

 

Times 9 July

 London Television-obsessed children are far more likely to recognise a Dalek than a magpie, research shows. They spend so much time cooped up playing computer games and watching TV that some have no knowledge of wildlife, experts say. A poll of 1,600 children aged between 10 and 12 found that one in three could not identify a magpie, and half could not tell the difference between a bee and a wasp, the National Trust found. Nine in ten recognised the Daleks and Yoda, the Star Wars character. As part of a National Trust campaign to urge families to spend more time exploring the great outdoors, it is taking a specially adapted bus with a garden on the top deck, right, to cities across England. Matthew Oates, of the National Trust, said: “The more distanced we become from nature, the more difficult it will be for us to survive on this planet.” Times 

General | Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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