The great reformer Michael Gove tore up the education system and rebuilt it based on his reform principles – so how does he think it’s all gone?
Spielman: ‘I’d rather be unpopular than say things I didn’t believe to be true’ Former chief inspector speaks to Schools Week about her time leading the embattled inspectorate
A-level results 2024: Future exams will be pegged to more generous 2023 baseline Students achieved more A*s this year than every year since 2010 (outside of teacher grades), despite Covid learning loss. Has grade inflation played a part? Schools Week investigates …
United Learning’s alternative pension plan: The lawyers’ views Pension proposals by the country’s biggest trust have led to questions over its legality, whether the TPS might collapse and if government can intervene. Here’s what the experts say…
Curriculum review launched: What schools need to know Call for evidence to launch in September, with national roadshows and findings published in 2025
6 quick school policy wins for Labour that won’t break the bank Labour’s big-ticket promises will take time. So here’s some easy policies they could do now, says ex-government adviser David Thomas
Alternative pension plan is a teacher pay shortcut, not solution Trust’s proposal to offer staff a less generous pension for more pay will leave staff ‘dangerously shortchanged’, says Paul Whiteman
Labour can’t solve everything – but this is what they should prioritise We stand at the dawn of a new era of education policy, says Russell Hobby. Here’s what Labour should do
The Lib Dems following Scotland on curriculum is remarkably bad The Scottish Curriculum for Excellence should be a warning to politicians of how not to reform a curriculum – not an inspiration, says Daisy Christodoulou