Abiha Nasir, aged nine, walks quietly into the small classroom, takes a seat, adjusts her hijab and picks up the drumsticks. A shy smile spreads across her face as she begins to play.
She was just five when she turned up at Feversham primary academy’s after-school clubs, leaving teachers astounded by her musical ability and how her confidence grew with an instrument in hand. Last year, Abiha successfully auditioned for Bradford’s gifted and talented music programme for primary school children, ...
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Author: Emma Church
Record gender gap in university places
"I was never really put off by the fees," says Maya Little. She is part of a surging number of young women beginning university this autumn, while the number of men going into higher education seems to have stalled.
When fees increased in England in 2012 to £9,000, demand for places carried on rising for women, but not for men.
The latest official figures show 55% of women entering higher education by the age of 30 compared with 43% of men. The proportion of women pursuing degrees has risen ...
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Tuition fee repayment earnings threshold to rise to £25,000
Low-earning graduates will benefit from a delay in their student loan repayments under a Conservative scheme designed to defuse the political damage over tuition fees and attempt to woo younger voters.
Speaking at the start of the Conservative party conference in Manchester, Theresa May announced plans to raise the income level that triggers student loan repayments for recent graduates in England from £21,000 to £25,000 a year.
The change is likely to apply only to those graduates who took out...
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Social capital: the new frontier in widening participation at universities
UK universities have made progress with widening access to higher education in recent years. But while there are further advances to be made, there is an increasing realisation that focusing on entry to university is not enough. The combination of the opportunity to study and academic achievement doesn’t guarantee a good job. Evidence at Queen Mary University of London suggests that our graduates do not always succeed personally, nor make a societal contribution, to the extent that their talents...
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Tuition fee repayment earnings threshold to rise to £25,000
Low-earning graduates will benefit from a delay in their student loan repayments under a Conservative scheme designed to defuse the political damage over tuition fees and attempt to woo younger voters.
Speaking at the start of the Conservative party conference in Manchester, Theresa May announced plans to raise the income level that triggers student loan repayments for recent graduates in England from £21,000 to £25,000 a year.
The change is likely to apply only to those graduates who took...
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Graduate employment tracking set to be rolled out across Europe
European Union states will be encouraged to produce comparable data on graduate employment to ensure that degrees remain relevant to the labour market.
While the vast majority of the EU’s involvement in higher education is now focused on either funding research and innovation through the Horizon 2020 programme or mobility through Erasmus+, there are signs that the next multi-year funding framework will seek to tackle other issues.
Speaking at the European University Association’s first for...
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Almost half of all young people in England go on to higher education
Tony Blair’s pledge that half of all young people should go on to higher education is within a whisker of becoming true as official figures revealed that 49% of those in England are expected to have entered advanced studies by the age of 30.
The government’s measure of higher education participation has reached its highest level since the introduction of £9,000 tuition fees in 2012, equalling the previous record of 49% since the annual estimates were first produced in 2006.
The figures sho...
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EMWPREP NEWS – September 2017 // Issue 3
EMWPREP News
Team
Team Update
The last two months have been a busy period for the EMWPREP Team with work on the new General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR), continual developments of the database and the release of the End of Year Reports.
Towards the end of August we held our first working group meeting to help the transition into the new GDPR and ensure compliance by May 2018. The meeting was well attended with representatives from nine full partner institutions. The main ...
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New EEF report: Good literacy skills crucial to closing attainment gap in Science
Testing theories through experiments and trials is crucial for pupils to learn science and could improve results for disadvantaged pupils in primary and secondary schools, according to a new report published by the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) and the Royal Society today.
Researchers from the Department of Education at the University of Oxford reviewed the best international research to identify the interventions and approaches for which there is evidence of a positive impact on young...
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Number of pupils taking arts subjects at GCSE falls to lowest level in a decade, report finds
The number of pupils taking arts subjects at GCSE has fallen to the lowest level in a decade, as schools encourage bright students to shun “soft” subjects. The uptake of arts subjects has seen a drastic decline in recent years, according to an analysis by the Education Policy Institute (EPI).
Their report analyses the uptake of GCSEs in arts subjects - including art and design, drama and theatre, music, dance, and performing arts – over the past ten years.
Researchers from the EPI examined...
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