New evidence-based methods of teaching and learning are being taken up very slowly.
from www.shutterstock.com
Despite significant reform agendas over the past decade, no real progress in outcomes has been achieved.
Fake degrees are bad news for universities and employers.
A flooded labour market is forcing more students to take up extracurricular activities in the hope of getting a job, but what does this mean for the TEF?
Gifted children can benefit from being grouped together in specialist schools or classes.
from www.shutterstock.com
Failing to provide an appropriate education for students who are gifted increases the risk of mental health issues, boredom, frustration, and behavioural problems.
There is often more than one factor at play when a student drops out of a university course.
from www.shutterstock.com
Lower completion rates for rural and remote universities are not necessarily a reflection on the quality of the educational experience they provide, but reflect the demographics of their students.
shutterstock
Let’s stop putting students down, and instead work together with them.
Phonics helps teach children how to merge separate sounds together to make it one word.
from www.shutterstock.com
Phonics instruction gives children letter-sound knowledge, a skill that is essential for them to read unfamiliar words by themselves.
Wearing a skirt can prevent girls from participating in sports.
From www.shutterstock.com
Wearing a skirt at school can make girls less likely to participate in physical activity, and it’s time schools changed their uniform policies.
Pexels
Your personal statement is one of the most crucial elements of your UCAS application. Here’s the best way to go about writing it.
Going circular on education.
Pexels
Our schooling system needs a rethink.
The prescriptivist stranglehold on grammar isn’t just restrictive, it’s often just plain wrong.
from www.shutterstock
Were your teachers right about when to use commas, and about not starting sentences with ‘and’?
Is school the most important part of education?
from www.shutterstock.com
We take a closer look at some of the common claims made this year to see if there is any truth to them.
A year of high expectations, yet little action.
from www.shutterstock.com
Gonski funding was scrapped and the vocational education sector got a new student loan system. Here’s what else happened in education this year…
How can we use data from international tests to improve student learning?
from www.shutterstock.com
Various forms of testing that reduce students’ knowledge, capacities and skills to a single number cannot of themselves help inform improvement.
Spending on vocational education has declined.
from www.shutterstock.com
While spending has grown for preschools, schools and universities, vocational education misses out.
On average year 3 girls perform higher than boys in reading, writing, grammar and punctuation, and spelling.
from www.shutterstock.com
The latest round of NAPLAN results show Australia’s school systems are not good at reducing the influence of a student’s background on their academic achievement.
Constant reforms in maths education aren’t helping Australia to improve its performance.
from www.shutterstock.com
Policy continuity is what is needed to improve Australian students’ maths capability.
A flat-rate fee on student loans isn’t a radical idea.
from www.shutterstock.com
A flat-rate fee on all student loans is a fairer economic proposal.
60% of high school students in Singapore receive private tuition.
from www.shutterstock.com
The role of private tuition plays a part in the overall success of students in Singapore, with around 80% of primary-school children having at least three hours of private tuition a week.
Should we base education reforms solely on Australia’s international ranking?
from www.shutterstock.com
The furore over Australia’s international ranking in science, maths and English obscures what we should really be focusing on.