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Would you get into grammar school? Try the 11-plus exam

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Theresa May’s resurrecting grammar schools so how would you fare in a test to get in one?

Theresa May has proposed a shakeup of the education system that could lead to an expansion of grammar schools across England. Many people object to the categorisation of pupils at age 11 on the basis of an exam. But how would you fare in such a test? Here’s a selection of 11-plus questions from sample tests produced by the educational publisher CGP. (To complete all the questions please view on desktop or mobile browsers rather than the app.)

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Keith Snowden obituary

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My friend and former colleague Keith Snowden, who has died aged 89, was a highly regarded and inspirational chief education officer for the Rotherham education authority.

A former history teacher, Keith advocated imaginative, pupil-centred teaching and learning, and under his leadership Rotherham schools had a good reputation. Since these were the schools in which his own children and those of his colleagues were educated, he would ask the question: “Why wouldn’t they be good schools?”

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Thousands of pupils missing from English school rolls – study

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Informal exclusions cited as possible reason as up to 7,700 pupils are lost from statistics

Thousands of children and young adults in England are missing from official education statistics after being taken out of state schools and failing to sit their GCSEs, according to researchers who say they have uncovered a black hole in the government’s figures.

The research found that 22,000 pupils who would have been in the sixth form this year left mainstream schooling before finishing year 11. Thousands of these had either moved away from England, joined private schools or were being home-schooled, but the location of up to 7,700 children could not be identified, FFT Education Datalab said.

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Sonic youth: the UK school turning teenagers' lives around

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SupaJam is proving a hit with music courses for young people who have fallen out of education

It is midday, and a teenage boy has been removed from class for causing trouble. But instead of being sent to the headteacher’s office, he is jamming on a keyboard while a teacher adds in some drums.

“It calms them down,” says Nick Stillwell, the co-founder of the SupaJam school in Swanley, Kent. “They realise life’s OK, and put the knife down.”

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Families of white working-class children 'lack drive' of migrants

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Ofsted chief says data shows families bear brunt of economic hardship and lose aspiration

White working-class children have fallen behind because their families can “lack the aspiration and drive seen in many migrant communities,” according to Amanda Spielman, the chief inspector of schools in England.

Spielman’s comments came as she sought to defend the Ofsted schools inspectorate against evidence showing it gives harsher judgments to schools in deprived areas with a high proportion of children from white, working-class backgrounds.

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What's it like to live in university halls?

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Psychology student Becky Kenderdine spent her first year living in student halls at the University of Birmingham

When I first moved into student halls I was nervous and excited. I was nervous about what the people I was going to be living with would be like. But I was also excited about moving in with young people for the first time.

I live with four others and we were the last flat to arrive. Everyone else got there on Saturday, but we didn’t move in until Sunday, so it was a bit daunting. Our flat is on the top floor of our block and I remember thinking: “Oh my god, I have to walk up all these stairs.”

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Online game attacked for raising student drop-out rates

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World of Warcraft, the online game, is under attack for causing students to drop out. The game, in which you create your own character - an orc, a troll, a dwarf or a human - and join others to defeat enemies in the mythical land of Azeroth, is topping sales charts in the US, but its makers are receiving publicity they could do without, thanks to Deborah Taylor Tate at the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Tate says: "You might find it alarming that one of the top reasons for college drop-outs in the US is online gaming addiction - such as World of Warcraft - which is played by 11 million individuals worldwide," she said in a speech.

Tate, one of five commissioners who oversee and regulate TV, radio and all communications related to the US, made the claim shortly after a student adviser at the University of Minnesota Duluth, Vince Repesh, told his local paper that he had seen students with severe academic and personal problems. "I accused one of them of coming in loaded from smoking dope, he looked so bad," Repesh told the Duluth News-Tribune.

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New-style exams may distort A-level and GCSE results - Ofqual

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Regulator warns schools of more variation than usual after reforms in many subjects

The head of England’s exam regulator has warned schools to expect volatility in their pupils’ results this summer, as new figures showed the impact of government reforms in the subjects being studied.

With hundreds of thousands of pupils in England sitting their A-level and GCSE exams, the regulator Ofqual signalled that results could be distorted by the new-style exams, especially at GCSE level, with grades now more dependent on exam marks than coursework.

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Share your 2018 GCSE and A-level experiences

Exam board makes last-minute changes to two A-level papers after leak

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Further pure maths and statistics tests affected as police open criminal investigation into claims relating to other exams this summer

An examination board investigating allegations of leaks has been forced to make last-minute changes to two A-level papers that were taken on Monday after another apparent breach of security.

Pearson, which owns the Edexcel exam board, said it had replaced questions in its statistics and further pure maths papers after the board was informed that some students “had information they should not have had”. It also confirmed that police had opened a criminal investigation into earlier allegations of malpractice relating to an A-level maths paper.

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Ofsted chief’s ‘call to action’ shows her lack of understanding | Letters

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Headteacher Rachel Hornsey says poor ratings are another cause of the deep divisions in our society. Saville Kushner thinks inspectors fail to understand the structural effects of poverty

In your report (Ofsted chief: white working-class children hindered by low aspirations, 22 June), Amanda Spielman claims to admire teachers in such areas and says a requiring improvement (RI) rating is merely a “call to action”. This shows a complete lack of understanding of the huge impact it has. I am the headteacher of a school whose population is predominantly low income, white working class. Last November, after a gruelling two-day ordeal, we received an RI grade. As an ex-local authority consultant and leader in three outstanding schools, I am fully confident that teaching in my school is at least as good as in schools with higher ratings, and is often inspirational. My staff work amid the huge pressures of leading social care cases and battling special educational needs and disability (Send) bureaucracy. During the inspection, my teachers were accused of not challenging children sufficiently in a kafkaesque charade as inspectors justified a grade based on data. We were told we lacked ambition, and were sneered at for the energies we invest in keeping Send children in our school while they await specialist provision.

Behaviour, safeguarding and early years were all recognised as good, but we still wear the badge of shame that is our RI grade, and are compelled to advertise it on our website to ward off more motivated parents who could be infected by our apparent “lack of drive”. A poor Ofsted grade is much more than a “call to action”. It is another cause of the deep divisions in our society.
Rachel HornseyHeadteacher, Lisa Knight, Louise Potter Assistant headteachers, Sutton Courtenay C of E primary school, Oxford

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Phillip Wearne obituary

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Phillip Wearne, who has died of a cardiac arrest aged 60, worked as a freelance journalist, TV producer and author all over the world.

I first met Phillip in 1989 in El Salvador, making a film for Channel 4, The Return of the Death Squads. His energy and local contacts soon helped us line up a host of brave and informative interviewees for the film: terrified villagers, Jesuit priests, human-rights workers, political leaders and eventually even a death squad member.

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David Dimbleby’s departure poses an interesting question | Letters

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Miles Secker says top jobs should no longer be reserved for Oxbridge graduates; Neil Wigglesworth thinks Question Time should be hosted by both a male and female journalist; Richard Goude thinks more women should be given a chance

More effort needs to be made to dispel the old suspicion that well-paid, taxpayer-funded, employment at the top of the BBC – like the higher ranks of the civil service, armed forces the law or CoE – are appointments unfairly reserved by gatekeepers to meet the supply of privately educated students who are good at English and history and not inclined to become builders, electricians, police officers or nurses (New Question Time host should be a woman, 22 June). The vacancy created by the departure of David Dimbleby should be filled by any individual who attended a comprehensive school and who did not collect a degree in history, English or some version of philosophy, politics and economics from the Oxbridge gatekeepers.
Miles Secker
Heckington, Lincolnshire

• Wouldn’t the sensible approach to Dimbleby’s replacement be to alternate the chair between male and female journalists? There are plenty of both genders well qualified for the role and it would give the viewing public a weekly opportunity to experience whatever gender differences in approach there may be. An additional benefit would be to reduce the possibility of the programme once again becoming a vehicle for a particular personality.
Neil Wigglesworth
Forton, Lancashire

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I just got a permanent academic job – but I'm not celebrating | Anonymous academic

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I’m happy to have found secure work, but now I’m inside the university system I can see clearly how exploitative it is

On the day I was interviewed for my current (permanent) job, I was homeless, broke and illegally squatting in an empty flat. My low-wage, nine-month academic contract at one of the most reputable universities in the world had just ended, leaving me penniless and saddled with thousands of pounds worth of debt.

This would be my final interview. After waiting two and a half years on the job market, I received an email the next day offering me the position. I cried tears of relief. It was all over: the crippling stress, the anxiety, the unbearable precarity of short-term academic contract work.

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Glasgow School of Art fire damage survey delayed over falling debris fear

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Neighbours of fire-ravaged building frustrated at inability to get into their homes

Concerns about the safety of the surviving shell of Glasgow School of Art’s Mackintosh building, which was gutted by fire last Friday, have delayed a full survey of the damage until next week.

Visiting the site on Friday, Glasgow city council leader Susan Aitken said: “It is a dangerous building, there is no question about that. The facade has actually moved quite considerably - about six inches. There is an imminent danger of collapse.”

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‘We don’t really need phones’: the French school that banned mobiles

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How pupils at La Gautrais rediscovered games, dance and the art of conversation

It’s breaktime at a middle school in rural Brittany, and huddles of teenagers are chatting in the playground. Two 15-year-olds sit reading novels, while others kick footballs or play chase. One boy does some press-ups.

The hum of conversation and flurry of movement contrasts with most other French secondary schools, where playgrounds can be eerily silent as pupils stare at their mobile phones. In La Gautrais, no one looks at Instagram, Snapchat or YouTube. Here mobile phones have been banned. Few seem to miss them.

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'Panic attacks and crying': how the new GCSEs affected pupils

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Many of those doing revamped exams report mental health problems and extreme stress

Pupils have delivered a damning verdict on the revamped GCSEs, saying they have caused mental exhaustion, panic attacks, crying, nosebleeds, sleepless nights, hair loss and outbreaks of acne.

About half a million 16-year-olds sat the tougher exams, which were initiated by the former education secretaryMichael Gove and tested for the first time this summer, with grades ranging from 9-1 rather than A*-G.

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Matters of fact: separating brilliant breakthroughs from science fictions

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The Guardian’s science editor on elixirs of life, questions of ethics, and meeting some extraordinary minds

There are people who will tell you that the elixir of life is to be found in the blood of youngsters. It’s a vampiric belief, but not unfounded. One day in February 2015, I watched Joe Castellano pull a tray of frosted vials full of human plasma from a freezer at Stanford University. The yellowy contents were bound for old mice. Infusions of the fluid have a striking effect: feeble animals perk up; they learn faster; their cognitive skills are sharpened. It seems that both bodies and brains are rejuvenated.

What gives rise to these intriguing changes is a major research question. Young plasma, it seems, may be suffused with compounds that keep tissues youthful, and lack certain factors that age us. Find these potent ingredients, and show that they can stave off ageing, and your name will go down in history. Or so the story goes.

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Support proves key for teachers and children alike in Kenya’s largest slum

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Efforts to improve the training and resources available to childminders in Nairobi’s Kibera settlement are bearing fruit – to the benefit of all concerned

Three-year-old Joy and her sister Lavine, four, are surrounded by kitchen pots, soft toys and an old wellington boot. It’s mid-morning at Kidogo’s nursery and preschool, and the sisters are playing in the dramatic centre, a place set aside for children to invent their own games. Each corner of the room is dedicated to a different activity: music, stories, art or a quiet space for reading.

The centre is one of the few quality childcare facilities in Kibera, an overcrowded informal settlement in Nairobi that houses 170,070 people, according to a 2009 national census (although other estimates have put the number significantly higher). Most centres are found in cramped rooms or homes, with one woman responsible for 20 or so children. Ventilation is poor and there are reports of babies being given sleeping pills to knock them out for the day, or children being locked in dark rooms. There’s rarely space to play.

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Students' end-of-year artwork 2018 – your entries so far

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We asked you to share your end-of-year artwork. Here is a small selection of the hundreds of contributions we’ve received so far

  • You can view all the entries or submit your own art here by 2 July
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