Further Education
Why training is good for business
Published: 01 February 2007
Train your way to the top job
Published: 11 January 2007
New year, new course: From European art to pole-dancing, expand your horizons
Published: 14 December 2006
Land-based colleges are going green
Published: 07 December 2006
Adult learning: Don't give up the day job to get ahead
Published: 16 November 2006
No such thing as a free lesson
Published: 02 November 2006
We pay to train Big Mac staff
Published: 05 October 2006
Smash the glass ceiling
Published: 14 September 2006
Further education: the Olympics start here
Published: 07 September 2006
Basic Skills: Baby, I've got to do some learning
Published: 27 July 2006
Leading article: Power to teach
Published: 20 July 2006
Now that teenagers aged 14 to 16 are able to opt to be educated in further education (FE) colleges, lecturers are being confronted with the kind of difficult behaviour that previously only teachers in schools saw. So, it is right that the Government should legislate to give FE lecturers the power to restrain unruly children who need to be removed from the classroom or otherwise controlled. It was a anomaly that they were required to teach disaffected youngsters without being able to do so effectively. Lecturers need the same powers as teachers. When will the Government decide that they also need the same pay?
Whatever happened to A-level choice?
Published: 13 July 2006
Postgraduate Lives: Felicity Ford, masters student at Oxford Brookes University
Published: 29 June 2006
Home Learning: You might learn more by remote control
Published: 22 June 2006
Somerset College: The building blocks of a sustainable future
Published: 01 June 2006
A message from Dr John Brennan at the Association of Colleges
Published: 01 June 2006
Take a break - and learn something
Published: 01 June 2006
Tutorial colleges: 'The teachers treat you with respect'
Published: 01 June 2006
Colin Carnall: Business schools must be more focused on the design and delivery of training
Published: 01 June 2006
John Brennan: American community colleges have a great deal for us to admire and emulate
Published: 04 May 2006
Britain and the United States have long had a close relationship. For years our schools and colleges have built strong links with partner institutions across the pond. And we have much to learn from each other, particularly in further education. I was fortunate enough to attend last week's annual convention of the American Association of Community Colleges (AACC) in Long Beach, California. Most people in the UK will not have heard of the AACC or the college system it represents. Community colleges are the equivalent of our further education colleges and there are many interesting parallels and contrasts between their system and ours.
Will the voters come out to save courses?
Published: 04 May 2006
Postgraduate Lives: Charlotte Miller, student at the Royal Veterinary College
Published: 13 April 2006
Thanks for free tuition; now give us the funds
Published: 06 April 2006
Leading article: Someone must pay for courses
Published: 30 March 2006
The Government's White Paper on the future of further education is right to single out staying-on rates at age 16 as the most pressing issue to be tackled. We cannot tolerate a situation in which countries such as India and China are expanding their education systems, but we lag behind at 24th out of 29 industrialised nations for the percentage of young people staying on in full-time education and training. This week's announcement that A-level courses are to be provided free to youngsters up to the age of 25 is imaginative.
Contemporary music academies give stars of future a chance to be heard
Published: 23 March 2006
If you were searching for the best spot to establish a school for popular musicians, you might not immediately think of Guildford, the Surrey hometown of corporate commuters. The Home Counties are where rock royalty retire to vulgar country mansions to count their money; not, surely, where the guitar heroes of the future are bred?