Education

Politics

The NUS campaign that undermines the fight against extremism

Student politics has always been a site of radical dissent. In theory, there is nothing wrong with this. It is perfectly legitimate to question the wisdom of conventional beliefs or government policy. However, a line must be drawn. In recent years, the National Union of Students (NUS) has promoted “Students Not Suspects”, a student-led campaign […]

Ideas

The Left’s sinister curbs on free speech in the name of ‘niceness’

Roy Wilkes is a schoolteacher, recently the subject of disciplinary action by his own trade union, the NUT, which accused him, according to the Times, of “grossly discriminatory (transphobic) statements… that were damaging to the mental health of members” and which “brought the union into disrepute”. Mr Wilkes’s actual statements (he seems to have pointed out […]

Government

Uncomfortable truths about what makes a terrorist

Speaking in Bethlehem the day after the slaughter at the Manchester Arena in May last year, Donald Trump made the following observation: “So many young beautiful, innocent people living and enjoying their lives murdered by evil losers in life. I won’t call them monsters because they would like that term. They would think that’s a […]

Policy

Hand-wringing won’t get you very far in the fight against terrorism

Last week I was in Brussels taking part in a discussion on radicalisation in prison. The event was hosted by the European Policy Centre, an independent think tank normally graced by the EU aristocracy. Perhaps the uncomfortable subject matter – the ghost at the banquet of European integration – kept Junker, Rompuy et al away. Maybe […]

Policy

Higher education needs more people like Toby Young

New Year hangovers amongst left-inclining intellectuals and academics have been greatly exacerbated by news of the appointment of right-wing controversialist Toby Young to the board of the new Office for Students. “Outrageous”, they are saying, that such a partisan figure should be appointed to such a crucial body, at such a sensitive time for higher […]

Ideas

Redefining social mobility

Justine Greening’s Social Mobility Action Plan, published today, isn’t a full White Paper of the kind that Secretaries of State normally produce (or even a Green Paper). It is much narrower in its scope than Education Excellence Everywhere and Gove’s The Importance of Teaching. But in its defence, it doesn’t claim to be an all encompassing document. Nor does […]

Education

Do we really have a market in higher education?

The Higher Education Bill, introduced into law in 2017, claims to put students at the heart of the system. The narrative and elements of policy are clear. Students will have access to higher quality information about the degrees and courses they wish to study and a new Teaching Excellence Framework will call Universities to account […]

Africa

Without Mugabe, Zimbabwe can stand tall again

A pure stroke of luck finds me in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe at this most historic time. As I write, the reign of the ruthless dictator, Robert Mugabe, is coming to an end. His image is still everywhere. Whether you’re in the airport, hotel, customs post to Zambia, entrance to the Victoria Falls National Park, or […]

Politics

The government isn’t the answer to educational inequality

Government is often seen as society’s great equalizer. In education, nothing can be further from the truth. Indeed, it is almost impossible for one to imagine an aspect of society with greater inequities than those existing in the U.S. education system. Income Inequality, Schools Edition Since children are assigned to government-run schools based on their […]

Ideas

How low-cost private schools are revolutionising education

In the world of international development, Liberia has recently attention for contracting out management of some public schools to the private sector. The Financial Times and The Economist have covered this story. That is partly due to the fact that the large American company involved, Bridge International Academies, is funded by, among others, Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates. Predictably, […]

Politics

Interest rates on student loans aren’t too high – they’re too low

There is increasing talk across the political spectrum of reforming the UK’s student loan system. To the extent that the discussion has been spurred by Jeremy Corbyn’s expensive, regressive and distortionary promise to abolish tuition fees, there is reason to be pessimistic. We are likely to end up with a student finance scheme which is […]

Politics

How to defuse the student debt time bomb

Timebomb: How the university cartel is failing Britain’s students was triggered by the concerns expressed by numerous friends who are parents of university students. Their complaint was simple. Their children are rarely at the university, and when they are there, they are taught for so little time that the whole experience feels like very poor value […]

Economics

Are the rich hoarding the American dream?

The great paradox of the Trump ascendency was that the man who rode the wave of anti-elite sentiment all the way to the White House was a multi-millionaire Manhattan property developer. For Richard Reeves, this apparent contradiction isn’t such a surprise. In his new book Dream Hoarders, about social mobility in America, he argues that […]

Policy

Theresa May must change her mind on foreign students

Earlier this year, I got talking to a Canadian diplomat. She was very keen on Brexit – or at least on one particular aspect of it. European students, who had been coming to British universities in their thousands, were suddenly feeling distinctly unloved. And Canada was only too happy to welcome them. Applications, she said, […]

Policy

Free schools are working – just look at their GCSE results

I wasn’t surprised to see a group of free schools among the country’s top performers in yesterday’s GCSE results. Reach Academy Feltham, a free school that opened in 2012 in one of London’s poorest boroughs, saw an astonishing 96 per cent of its pupils get 9 – 4 in English and maths (A* – C […]

Politics

Why does Corbyn want to take from the poor to subsidise the rich?

The narrative that it is only a matter of time before student tuition fees are abolished is beginning to take hold. Once the preserve of the Radical Left, it is a view that is becoming increasingly mainstream. The arch Blairite Andrew Adonis recently said that “fees have now become so politically diseased, they should be abolished entirely”. And […]

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