
Coronavirus: reviewing your behaviour policy after Covid
How to support positive learning behaviours
How to support positive learning behaviours
There are no quick or cheap fixes to education recovery.
Support for children and young people and the role for schools
NEU Cymru Education Recovery Plan – February 2021
The National Education Union (NEU) education recovery plan sets out how to reopen schools and colleges in a safe and sustainable way.
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a marked impact on mental, as well as physical health in the UK and elsewhere.
It's a relief that the feedback from schools has been heeded.
A serious warning from the Education Committee that Government must provide enough support for disadvantaged young people or risk deepening inequalities.
The report rightly says that the gap will require specific targeted and continued input to support the learning of disadvantaged children.
Teachers worked hard for all their pupils throughout the pandemic and the needs of disadvantaged is of paramount importance to school and college leaders and their staff.
Unreasonable and intensive workload, pay and lack of professional agency is driving teachers from the profession in ever increasing numbers. This must be addressed by the Government urgently.
These reports show, once again, how much we need a long-term, properly thought-through and resourced plan for education recovery.
The DfE "possible arrangements for testing in September" scarcely qualify as a plan at all.
Sir Kevan Collins, Education Recovery Commissioner Resignation.
The Government’s plans for education recovery for the nation’s pupils are inadequate and incomplete.
Labour is right to recognise that children need to recover through play and through greatly improved mental-health support.
The EPI report highlights the scale of the disruption caused by the pandemic and the necessary funding needed to repair the damage.
We agree with the report’s conclusions that overcoming the pandemic is possible and that it should serve as a catalyst for sustained improvements in education.
Survey of members on how best to steer a course for education out of Covid.
The NEU and the Sutton Trust have recommended to Government that £750 million is needed as the first immediate boost to Pupil Premium. Instead, £302 million has been announced.
No educational programme will be successful unless it is linked to measures on a massive scale to deal with poverty.
Today the NEU launches a new Education Recovery Plan
The National Education Union has today written to the Prime Minister outlining its proposals for a National Education Recovery Plan.