Weekly round-up: What will Labour mean for schools?
This week’s Tes round-up focuses on Labour’s plans for education, the challenges the new government must overcome and the reaction from the sector to a historic election victory
Labour’s first task? A huge decision on teacher pay
There’s little time to celebrate for Labour’s education team because they face immediate challenges on teacher pay and school funding, writes Luke Sibieta of the Institute for Fiscal Studies.
Keegan among former education ministers to lose in election
Gillian Keegan, who had been education secretary for one and a half years, was among more than half a dozen ex-education ministers who lost their parliamentary seats in the general election.
“Labour’s victory is a golden opportunity for education”
Pepe Di’Iasio, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, says “change is sorely needed after several years that have felt chaotic and oppositional”.
Teaching assistant cuts expected in half of deprived schools
Half of senior leaders working in the most disadvantaged areas of England expect their school to cut spending on teaching assistants in the next year to cope with budget pressures, a poll shows.
Anger over “unreasonably difficult” A-level paper
Exam board AQA must take action before next year’s physics A level after reports that one of this summer’s papers was “unreasonably difficult”, subject experts have warned.
Teachers get “minimal” training in helping pupils to write
Teachers receive “minimal” training on writing, despite a strong appetite for further development across the primary and secondary phases, according to a review by the Education Endowment Foundation.