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Daily News Summary
21 February 2023

'Elite' university places should be allocated on merit, former independent head says
ISC blog: exploring Python, the MFL coding programme
Students who cheat using AI platform 'risk disgrace', universities say
Grammar schools 'still failing' to boost number of poorer children, analysis finds
Texting parents could help ease England's ‘truancy crisis’, experts say
London free school meals pledge could see schools facing £39m shortfall
Rent outstrips loans in most UK cities, leaving many university students to 'sofa surf or squat'

'Elite' university places should be allocated on merit, former independent head says

 

Writing in The Telegraph, Martin Stephen, former High Master of St Paul's School, calls for places at 'elite' universities to be allocated to students based on achievement. He says: "To admit a young person to such a hugely demanding environment as Cambridge based only on 'potential' is akin to building a house from the surface up only."

 
The Telegraph

ISC blog: exploring Python, the MFL coding programme

 

In the latest ISC blog, coinciding with International Mother Language Day, James Mutton of Putney High School GDST considers the wealth of benefits that come with a broad language curriculum and explains how Putney is expanding its horizons even further by offering the coding language Python as an option for linguists.

 
ISC

Students who cheat using AI platform 'risk disgrace', universities say

 

Universities Scotland, the umbrella body for Scotland’s 19 higher education institutions, is working on ways to handle the rise of the artificial intelligence (AI) platform ChatGPT, which is able to generate bespoke, competently written essays almost immediately. Universities have warned that students could face expulsion and 'disgrace' if they try to use such apps to cheat. By Marc Horne, The Times.

 
The Times

Grammar schools 'still failing' to boost number of poorer children, analysis finds

 

Analysis by the BBC has revealed that in a quarter of England's 160 grammar schools, less than five per cent of children were eligible for pupil premium support, despite most trying to improve their admissions policies. By Branwen Jeffreys & Wesley Stephenson, BBC News.

 
BBC

Texting parents could help ease England's ‘truancy crisis’, experts say

 

Lee Elliot Major, professor of social mobility at the University of Exeter, has said that personalised text messages to parents could be an effective and inexpensive way of helping to improve school attendance rates, after staff have struggled to 're-engage' pupils and their families following the COVID pandemic. By Sally Weale, The Guardian.

 
The Guardian

London free school meals pledge could see schools facing £39m shortfall

 

Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, has pledged to extend free school meals to all primary pupils in London next year, however the amount of funding for the scheme, which is only guaranteed for one year and does not extend to secondary schools, has been criticised. By Freddie Whittaker, Schools Week.

 
Schools Week

Rent outstrips loans in most UK cities, leaving many university students to 'sofa surf or squat'

 

Students have claimed they are left with no option but to 'sofa surf or squat' as the rising price of rent has outstripped loans in the cities most popular for studying outside of London. By Steve Robson, iNews.

 
iNews

 

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