We could, if lost time really is the objection to 2021’s exams going ahead, shorten the Easter holidays and pay teachers a bonus for extra work.
These are my starters for ten – so it’s over to you. What are the biggest choices? What are the problems that we have to get ahead of to keep afloat?
The most deprived children are facing greater challenges to their education; Britain must remedy this disadvantage gap.
The fifth piece in our series this week about what the Tory Manifesto should look like.
Successful schools would have to toe the line or be subject to the attentions of local democratic controllers. They could be destroyed without shutting them down.
The Prime Minister went to Eton on a scholarship, and has time and again evinced his commitment to maximising opportunity for all.
Research shows that investment in the early years of a child’s life is the most effective way to improve his or her long-term life chances.
His first major interview returns policy to the spirit of May’s original education ideas, with new faith schools and expanded selective ones as part of the mix.
Fairly or unfairly, the pro-EU cause is already associated with elites. The arrival of the Withdrawal Bill in the Upper House will do nothing to diminish that impression.
There are better ways to spend money on education than on tax breaks for very expensive profit-making institutions.
The Education Secretary must navigate skilfully to get the proposals safely to port.
While it is no surprise that the current party leadership has leapt at his new idea, neither the moral nor the economic arguments stack up.
Yes, Livingstone named him 12 times when interviewed by me this week. Plus: Saudi Arabia uncovered, Michael Howard unmuzzled. And: In memory of Helen Szamuely.
The second piece in our pre-Budget series on how to eliminate the structural deficit.
A number of highly-equipped educational establishments will be out of use until the next academic year. We should use them.