Extensions to 11-18 schools before new La Mare Primary
CONSTRUCTION work on the new La Mare de Carteret Primary School is scheduled to start after the extensions on the two 11-18 comprehensive schools get under way.
CONSTRUCTION work on the new La Mare de Carteret Primary School is scheduled to start after the extensions on the two 11-18 comprehensive schools get under way.
THE president of Education has said more needs to be done to win over the ‘hearts and minds’ of the public, in the wake of the States decision to give financial backing to the two new 11-18 comprehensive schools.
WHILST I agree with Horace Camp that consensus government is the best (or least worst) system of government for Guernsey, I do not share his view that a basic 50-50 split between elected members is a problem.
AMBITIOUS plans to create two new 11-18 comprehensive schools are part of £157m. of financial backing given by States members in a historic decision to transform education.
MOVES to delay a decision on the proposed 11-18 comprehensive schools have been resoundingly defeated, as the two new all-ability colleges look likely to become a reality.
AN EFFORT to delay Education, Sport and Culture's proposals for one school across two colleges was thwarted earlier today amidst fears that it could lead to another debate about the merits of a three or four school system and perhaps even the issue of selection itself.
STATES members have rejected holding a tribunal of inquiry into the conduct of Education, Sport & Culture over its handling of the head of curriculum and standards appointment.
Half of all heart attacks happen in people who do not have significant narrowing of the arteries.
DOES Education employ a PR firm? The spin to which islanders have been subjected over recent months is without parallel. And senior appointments have been made, some with newly created titles. The appointees are to serve in a hypothetical system involving two schools (or is it one school, sorry, college) with fancy names in abundance. Education’s strategy throughout is self-evidently to brainwash us all with the idea that what we are witnessing is a done deal. What Education is actually going to ask the States for is retrospective permission to make such appointments and for its massive spending agenda to be funded. But if the States say no, the scheme will bite the dust. What, one wonders, has Education promised these senior appointees in the event that the scheme is rejected? Is there an agreed pay-off?
The paper is being presented at the European Society of Cardiology Congress.
An experiment with cameras helped doctors identify lack of exercise and too much sedentary behaviour when they are not around.
Tucking into the savoury snacks twice a week was found to lower the risk of death from cardiovascular disease.
PLANS to overhaul the island’s schools have been criticised as risky, counter-intuitive and lacking detail and transparency by the island’s political watchdog.
TO ensure value for money and an evident need for capital, the Policy & Resources committee has today lodged three amendments to Education, Sport & Culture's 'Transforming Education' policy letter.
THE States’ senior committee wants more financial evidence to justify the multi-million-pound capital spend on the transformation of local schools, and is planning an eleventh-hour amendment to Education’s policy letter.