Major changes for schools
Major changes for schools"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
HOLLANDE WILL SET OUT PLAN TO 'REBUILD EDUCATION' AS FRANCE HAS 'STRUGGLED TO ENTER THE 21ST CENTURY' SCHOOLS are set for widespread changes - including the much-touted
return to a four-and-a-half day week - as President Hollande prepares to set out plans to overturn years of poor performance. The scale of the task is revealed in a new report which says
that schooling in France has "struggled to enter the 21st century". President Hollande will reveal his proposals to rebuild confidence in education this week with proposals for a
new law to be introduced before the end of the year. His government had set up the _Refondons l’école_ Rebuild Education inquiry in July with the aim of identifying problem areas and
solutions. The report, headed by leading educationist Christian Forestier, found that one in three primary pupils was judged as "poor" or "very poor", one in five left
school without real qualifications, and just one in three students gained a degree. With unemployment at a 13-year high of more than three million and more than one-in-five young people out
of work, the education system is being blamed for not preparing them for working life. The report has called for a more "benevolent" form of education with schools being more
welcoming, respectful of children's natural rhythms, a change in holidays and a less heavy school day. It wants schools that prevent violence and especially allow all pupils to get into
good learning habits from their earliest days. The school week would change to a four-and-a-half day week, with a preference for Wednesday morning classes, and pupils would spend more time
working in groups. Repeating classes would also be dropped as too costly and ineffective and the report also says teachers should stop using notes to parents as a way to highlights
children's faults. Obligatory homework would be dropped but replaced with work to be done in school with classrooms open until later in the afternoon, with personalised assistance.
Photo: Chlorophylle fotolia.com
Trending News
Erectile dysfunction drugs are essential and probably life-saving and should be provided to all men who need them just as birth control should be provAccess through your institution Buy or subscribe Phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitors are commonly used to treat erectile dysf...
Hines VA Hospital surgeon appointed Chairman of VA’s Transplant Surgery Surgical Advisory BoardThe Transplant Surgery SAB advises VA’s National Surgery Office (NSO) and VA leadership. During the three-year appointme...
Radware Bot Manager Captcha...mais votre activité sur le site est comparable à celle d'un robot. Si vous utilisez un proxy anonyme pour vous c...
AARP Purpose Prize Fellow Geeta MehtaMemorial Day Sale! Join AARP for just $11 per year with a 5-year membership Join now and get a FREE gift. Expires 6/4 G...
Page not found - HW News EnglishNationalCDS Chief Chauhan Rubbishes Pakistan’s Jet Claims As ‘Incorrect’Zaina Afzal KuttyMay 31, 2025May 31, 2025May 31,...
Latests News
Major changes for schoolsHOLLANDE WILL SET OUT PLAN TO 'REBUILD EDUCATION' AS FRANCE HAS 'STRUGGLED TO ENTER THE 21ST CENTURY'...
Brain fade moment: madhya pradesh skipper rajat patidar left upset by bizzare decision from third umpire during smat 2024 finalThe Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy 2024 final between Mumbai and Madhya Pradesh witnessed a dramatic and bizarre moment featuri...
Transport show reveals the cars of the futureELECTRIC AND HYBRIDS COULD DOMINATE MARKET IN A FEW YEARS Drivers thinking of changing their road use and perhaps switch...
7 real-life heroes you should knowThis must have gone on for five minutes, but it felt like an hour. An architect neighbor smelled smoke and ran over to h...
Journalists freed after 18 monthsHERVÉ GHESQUIÈRE AND STÉPHANE TAPONIER WERE FILMING A REPORT IN AFGHANISTAN WHEN THEY WERE KIDNAPPED IN 2009 TWO televis...