commissioner, kevin collins, and they rejected it commissioner, kevin collins, and they rejected it. kevin collins was recommended, they rejected it. kevin collins was recommended, 32.5 they rejected it. kevin collins was recommended, 32.5 hours - they rejected it. kevin collins was recommended, 32.5 hours is - they rejected it. kevin collins wasj recommended, 32.5 hours is 8.45 they rejected it. kevin collins was i recommended, 32.5 hours is 8.45 to recommended, 32.5 hours is 8.1i5 to 3.15 on a normal school day. kevin collins was talking about 35 hours, and you and your blog at the time said it at least showed a sense of ambition. so do you think school should be going even longer? it! should be going even longer? i c like to should be going even longer? if. like to see the evidence for whether quantity of education is more important than quality. if i was back being a head teacher and being rebuked because the school day wasn t long enough, the easy way of responding to that is
will smith, preparing to slap chris rock, before winning the oscar, for best actor at ceremony in los angeles. president biden has said he will be calling for regime change in russia when he said vladimir putin cannot remain in power. and the education secretary told the program of a child collapsing at a food bank, heart breaking, as the government is looking at setting out the school s new white paper. more on government s plans for schools now, and standing by for us is becky, and very pleased with the education secretary where you are, becky, good morning. good morning, kay. yes, they are very broadly supportive of that white paper. one of the points in the paper that a lot of schools don t like is about the 32.5-hour week. they want it to be a national average. and it equates to 6.5 hours a
of children leaving primary school to reach expected standards in reading, writing and maths. in 2019, that figure was just 65%. the aim is for the national average gcse grade to rise from lt.5 to 5 a strong pass by 2030. and schools will have to offera minimum 32.5 hours teaching a week. education unions have criticised the plans, saying they lack ambition and won t do enough to help disadvantaged children. here s our education editor, branwen jeffreys. we are going to have a look first of all and what histograms are. ilustith all and what histograms are. with gcses on the all and what histograms are. with gcses on the horizon, school has got serious but across england, some teenagers have struggled to return. get started straightaway. get started straightaway. ministers will cive get started straightaway. ministers will give councils get started straightaway. ministers will give councils stronger - will give councils stronger powers and attendance. ilustith will give council
online or in the classroom. these resources will be available across the united kingdom, levelling up education across our great country. we will continue to support leaders and teachers to create a classroom were all children can learn in a way that recognises individual needs and abilities. in addition, we are going to boost our ability to gather and share data on behaviour and attendance. we will move forward with a national behaviour survey to form an accurate picture of what really goes on in school and in classrooms, and of course, to modernise our systems to monitor attendance. we will introduce a minimum expectation for the length of the school week to the national average of 32.5 hours for all mainstream state funded schools from september 2023 at the latest. thousands of schools already deliver this, mr speaker, but there are a number that don t and that needs to