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UNITED KINGDOM: EDUCATION
In the main GCSE-level tables, students at Thomas Telford city technology college (CTC) in Shropshire did best by far. All its 15-year-olds get the equivalent of 12 good GCSEs, averaging 760.3 points - much more than any other school, including grammars and independents. This year's tables count a much wider range of vocational qualifications at this level. The Independent Schools' Council, drawing attention to such things as cake decorating certificates, said they had become "absurd". At advanced level, the students at Colyton Grammar School in Devon took top slot by averaging 512.6 points. Challenging areas: An inner-city comprehensive which has had an increasingly "can do" attitude in recent times heads this year's "most improved" list. The proportion getting top GCSE-level grades at Sir John Cass Foundation and Redcoat Church of England Secondary School in east London has gone up by 51 percentage points since 2001, to 87%. This is the third year the school has topped the list - but it shares the honour this time with The North School in Ashford, Kent. Its performance has also risen 51, from 9% to 60%.
Photo: Minister Stephen Twigg checking on Oaklands School, Tower
Hamlets
The School Standards Minister, Stephen Twigg, who visited another of the most-improved schools, said: "These figures show that the fastest improvement is being made in areas of significant deprivation and historically low achievement." The Liberal Democrats said it was time to abandon the "meaningless" tables - which hid the fact that two thirds of students still failed to gain the national standard in the core curriculum subjects of English, maths and science. The leader of the Secondary Heads Association, John Dunford, said: "Although more difficult to interpret, the greater complexity of this year's tables is welcome in avoiding the simplistic approach of previous years and giving parents a broader view of the achievements of schools." But the tables were "deeply flawed", and created perverse incentives for schools to change their exam policy and even curriculum to improve their standings.
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School introduces metal
detectors
A school has introduced hand-held metal detectors in an attempt to prevent students carrying knives.
The airport-style detectors will not be used
randomly.
Tollbar Business and Enterprise College in New Waltham, near Grimsby, has used the airport-style devices "a couple of times", principal David Hampson said. "We use them if we have any kind of suspicion. We do not use them at random," he said. Jayne Walmsley, whose son Luke was stabbed to death at another school in Lincolnshire, has welcomed the move. The North East Lincolnshire school has stressed it does not have a knife or drug problem and said the handheld scanners had been bought as a precaution. Mr Hampson explained: "They were bought to search children for any metal object including mobile phones, a blade or any foil that could be used to wrap a drug-related substance." The college's vice-principal, David Riden, said the device would only be used "on a very selective basis" and only after suspicions had been raised that a student was carrying something that was banned from school. "It would confirm our suspicions one way or the other," Mr Riden added. If a student refused to be scanned by the detector, his or her parents would be asked to remove the student from the school. Knives campaign: Luke Walmsley was murdered at Birkbeck School in North Somercotes 14 miles away from Tollbar, in November 2003. Since Luke's death, Mrs Walmsley, from Cleethorpes, has campaigned for a minimum five-year sentence for people found to be carrying knives. "I hope more schools follow this lead," she said. "I would rather have kids searched randomly so no one can claim to be victimised but this is a big step in the right direction." Although the detectors will be used to scan for knives, Mr Hampson revealed they had been largely catching children with mobile phones, which are banned on school grounds.
'1,000 teachers killed' in
Aceh
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