Tag Archives: education
-
This election was about education too
Leave a commentJune 22, 2017 by Paul Goldsmith
Lots of focus has been put on the young vote and the old vote. The older vote might have been …
Continue reading -
VAT on Private School fees to fund free school lunches for Primary pupils – the devil’s in the detail
Leave a commentMay 20, 2017 by Paul Goldsmith
The idea, introduced by the Labour Party, of putting VAT on private school fees to fund free school meals for …
Continue reading -
Think the education funding debate is ideological? Think again.
Leave a commentMay 4, 2017 by Paul Goldsmith
This is about real people, and the future of this country. The state primary school of which I am Governor …
Continue reading -
The three episodes that helped me learn most about behaviour management
1June 23, 2015 by Paul Goldsmith
There’s been a major focus in the media this past week on behaviour management in schools, prompted by the …
Continue reading -
Why Labour’s commitment to Careers Advice is so important
1April 10, 2015 by Paul Goldsmith
There were many catalysts for my choice to go into teaching back in 2005. Having been a management consultant for …
Continue reading -
Free Schools – Vive la Difference!
1March 11, 2015 by Paul Goldsmith
At last we have a proper issue on which the parties are properly split. It is an important one as …
Continue reading -
Labour’s tuition fees discussions are like watching a slow-motion car crash
1February 11, 2015 by Paul Goldsmith
Sometimes, political parties do things that are actually hard to watch, so utterly amateurish and nonsensical are they. Trying to …
Continue reading -
A fall in GCSE results is not a lowering of standards, and vice versa
Leave a commentFebruary 3, 2015 by Paul Goldsmith
Sometimes, particularly with an interviewer as clever as Andrew Marr, you have to wonder if journalists are being deliberately stupid. …
Continue reading -
Let’s give all our children the skills to succeed
2February 2, 2015 by Paul Goldsmith
This weekend, the Conservatives launched a new policy that demands that children are able to perform a variety of literacy …
Continue reading -
There is only so much a school can do
3January 17, 2015 by Paul Goldsmith
The first day I met David (not his real name) he walked very slowly into the tutor room at my …
Continue reading -
A level choices are the key to closing the gender pay gap
4January 4, 2015 by Paul Goldsmith
We’ve been debating the gender pay gap in Economics A-level over the past few weeks. In particular, students are asked …
Continue reading -
Social mobility can be helped by levelling up, not levelling down
2September 7, 2014 by Paul Goldsmith
Of the people I know, it is only those who have already made it to the top or those who …
Continue reading -
It’s not whether you set pupils – but how you do it that matters
Leave a commentSeptember 5, 2014 by Paul Goldsmith
The “setting by ability” debate flared up again on Wednesday when Nicky Morgan, the Secretary of State for Education, had …
Continue reading -
Why we should welcome the introduction of free school meals for all
Leave a commentSeptember 2, 2014 by Paul Goldsmith
From today, every single child in the first three year of school will eligible for a free school meal. That …
Continue reading -
Think all children love summer holidays? Think again.
2August 30, 2014 by Paul Goldsmith
Back in 2008, the school I taught at got inspected by Ofsted. One of the most shocking statistics that came …
Continue reading -
Fewer A-level retakes may result in ‘worse’ grades but also ‘better’ students
1August 16, 2014 by Paul Goldsmith
It used to be that beneath the ‘good’ news of constantly improving A-level grades was some rather ‘bad’ news of …
Continue reading -
Universities UK tuition fee impact figures should lead to a discussion about what a university education is for
Leave a commentAugust 12, 2014 by Paul Goldsmith
So Universities UK published a report recently that is the first proper attempt to analyse the effect of raising university …
Continue reading -
Why does a publicly funded academy think good teaching is ‘commercially sensitive’
Leave a commentJuly 29, 2014 by Paul Goldsmith
Sometimes you hear something that makes you stop in your tracks and realise that our education system is going in …
Continue reading -
Gove’s removal means the election was put above education
5July 18, 2014 by Paul Goldsmith
During his time as Education Secretary, Michael Gove would often quote a passage of Machiavelli: ‘There is nothing more difficult, …
Continue reading -
Gove’s removal was correct cowardice
Leave a commentJuly 16, 2014 by Paul Goldsmith
The big news in the education sphere in the Cabinet reshuffle yesterday was the moving of Michael Gove from Education …
Continue reading -
Lib Dems education policy – pushing them Ed-wards
Leave a commentJune 14, 2014 by Paul Goldsmith
The most interesting aspect of the Lib Dems’ announcement this morning of a manifesto promise at the next election for all …
Continue reading -
Education spot – In Praise of Nearpod – improve engagement and assess learning as you teach
2May 24, 2014 by Paul Goldsmith
How would you like to know what every single one of your pupils have learned and understood as the class is …
Continue reading -
A legacy for Ann McGuire would be better mental health services for teenagers
Leave a commentMay 16, 2014 by Paul Goldsmith
The funeral for Ann McGuire, the school teacher who was fatally stabbed last month, takes place today in Leeds. She …
Continue reading
Recent Comments