The headteacher was courted by Michael Gove after achieving spectacular results at Mossbourne academy in Hackney A headteacher hailed as a “miracle worker” for dramatically improving failing inner-city schools will be the new head of Ofsted. Sir Michael Wilshaw, renowned for showing “tough love” to pupils and their parents, will start his new job in January 2012. He will have a pre-appointment hearing in front of MPs on the cross-party education select committee and his appointment is subject to the approval of the privy council. The 64-year-old will fill a role left vacant in June when the former head of Ofsted, Christine Gilbert, left early. Gilbert was said to have been under pressure to leave after the coalition government came to power. Wilshaw, who was knighted in 2000 for services to education, is said to have been courted for the role for some time. Michael Gove, the education secretary, has called him “my hero”. The son of a postman espouses views that are similar to Gove’s. He argues strongly for a return to traditional subjects, strong discipline, extended school days and no excuses. Wilshaw turned St Bonaventure’s Catholic boys school in Forest Gate, east London, into one of the most improved schools in the country as headteacher between 1985 and 2003. But he is most famous for his current role as executive principal of Mossbourne academy in Hackney. The school, less than one mile from the Pembury estate – the scene of the largest confrontation during the riots in London this summer – achieves results of which many fee-paying schools are envious. It replaced Hackney Downs school, which was described as the worst in Britain before closing in 1995. This summer, after its first A-level results, seven of Mossbourne’s pupils got places at Cambridge , one went to the Royal College of Music and 65% went to Russell Group institutions – the 20 most prestigious universities in the UK. Some 85% of Mossbourne pupils achieved five A* GCSEs including English and maths. The school’s catchment is very disadvantaged, with 40% on free school meals and 30% on the special needs register. Wilshaw, who was born in India and came to Britain as a child, has taken out restraining orders on badly behaved parents and thinks nothing of sending pupils home for wearing the wrong coloured shoes. At the start of each class, children pledge aloud in unison to maintain an “inquiring mind, a calm disposition and an attentive ear”. Wilshaw pays staff extra to come into school at the weekend. He will take the helm at a time when the country’s education landscape is radically changing. One in three pupils now attend academies and a new tranche of free schools is expected to be announced shortly. Ofsted’s brief is slimmer than it was for Wilshaw’s predecessor. From January, it will concentrate more on pupils’ behaviour, teacher quality and children’s reading. It intends to make it harder to give schools a rating of “outstanding”. Gove said he could not think of a better person to lead Ofsted. “He is one of the best educators of his generation … He has transformed the fortunes of thousands of children during his time as a headteacher. “He truly understands what success looks like and knows how to achieve it – even in the most challenging circumstances. This role will allow more heads, teachers and other professionals to be influenced by this talented and inspirational leader. “I have every confidence that his appointment will help to raise standards in education and children’s services in England.” Wilshaw said he would try to provide a commentary on educational standards, but also to “challenge the service to provide consistently high-quality provision for young people and adults”. In an interview with the Guardian last month , Wilshaw said there were “a lot of coasting schools out there, particularly outside urban areas, that are underachieving”. He said too many schools were told they were good and outstanding by inspectors. “I was shocked to read that only 4% of schools are judged outstanding in teaching, yet 20% are outstanding overall … Have we gone for the soft option too often? Yes we have we. At 15, we’re two years behind China in maths. We as a nation should be alarmed.” Ofsted Schools Education policy Hackney London Jessica Shepherd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …At the Los Angeles premiere for Hunter S. Thompson’s ‘The Rum Diary,’ Johnny Depp and Amber Heard reveal how great it was to film in Puerto Rico. (Oct. 14)
Continue reading …French prosecutors say Dominique Strauss-Kahn did something to a writer that qualifies as sexual assault, but they can’t send him to trial because it happened too long ago and they are dropping the case. (Oct 14)
Continue reading …Watch the trailer for sex addiction drama Shame – Steve McQueen’s second collaboration with Michael Fassbender
Continue reading …Asos’s UK retail sales growth slowed to 1% in the second quarter from 15% in the first quarter of 2011 The head of British online fashion retailer Asos said he underestimated what impact UK macroeconomic headwinds would have on the firm’s second-quarter sales. “We all underestimated what was going to happen in the UK and it hasn’t got any better, it is challenging,” chief executive Nick Robertson told Reuters on Friday after the firm posted a slowdown in its phenomenal sales growth for the three months to 30 September. “So hands up, we probably underestimated that headwind in the UK, but there’s still growth there, so it’s not a complete train crash,” he said. Asos’s UK retail sales growth slowed to 1% in the second quarter from 15% in the first quarter. “Even to support this kind of level of growth we are pulling levers that we didn’t think would have to be pulled,” said Robertson, pointing to increased promotional and marketing activity. He said he expected full-year UK retail sales growth to be “somewhere between flat and low single digit”. But the CEO stressed the real prize for Asos is international growth, where second quarter sales increased 141% and now represent 59% of the total. “The story continues to be, we’ve just got to keep internationalising and internationalising quickly because that’s where we’re going to find the growth,” he said. During the second quarter Asos launched three more country specific sites in Australia, Italy and Spain, taking the total number of sites to seven. Robertson said he hoped to have a Chinese language website up and running in 18 to 24 months. He noted that China is already a top six country for Asos, with Chinese customers using the UK site. Shares in Asos reached a 12-month high of £25.08 in June, fuelled by buoyant trading and bid speculation, but have since lost 40% of their value as the overall market has corrected, directors have sold shares and investors have fretted about the financial health of the younger UK shopper. The stock was down 7.3% at £13.94, valuing the business at about £1.10bn . Asos Retail industry guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Volkswagen Canada wanted to celebrate the launch of the 2012 Jetta GLI by making reference to its beauty. So they decided to create the ‘Great Art Heist’ campaign which saw improv art galleries across Canadian cities and featured limited edition, hand-numbered… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Simply Zesty Discovery Date : 12/10/2011 19:07 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …Welfare secretary attacks Child Poverty Action Group charity for ‘irresponsible behaviour’ in challenging benefit reforms in court Campaigners accused the welfare secretary, Iain Duncan Smith, of “losing his cool” after the cabinet minister launched an extraordinary attack against a charity for challenging the government’s proposed housing benefit reforms in the courts, describing the action as “ridiculous … irresponsible behaviour (and) an ill-judged PR stunt” which resulted in “a massive waste of taxpayers’ money and court time”. The Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) had sought to overturn the government’s cap on housing benefit, arguing in the high court that such a move would result in the “social cleansing” of expensive areas of the UK. The caps mean that benefits paid to the poor to cover rents cannot exceed £250 a week for a one-bedroom property, £290 for two bedrooms, £340 for three bedrooms and £400 for four bedrooms. The government’s own assessment shows that groups affected include people with disabilities, teenage mothers and ethnic minority families. Charities had argued that the effect would be felt first in the capital, saying 9,000 London households facing would have to leave their homes as a result of the caps – and about 4,600 would be unable to find anywhere else to live “locally”. This could mean upwards of 20,000 children having to move, 14,000 out of their local area, resulting in disruption to education, health and social services. The Social Security Advisory Committee advised the government not to proceed with the changes, arguing that the risks – of increasing levels of homelessness, crime and serious disruption to poor children’s schooling – outweighed any financial savings. However the judge dismissed CPAG’s claim – essentially agreeing with the government that the purpose of housing benefit was not to prevent homelessness, but to help claimants with their rent while also protecting the public purse. Ministers were within their rights to cut back spending. Duncan Smith said: “CPAG’s challenge to our housing benefit reforms was an ill-judged PR stunt, and amounts to nothing more than a massive waste of taxpayers’ money and court time.” He added: “The cost of housing benefit has spiralled completely out of control, and this judgment is further vindication that our reforms will ensure support is in place for those who need it, but stop the crazy excesses we have seen in recent years of people on benefits living in houses that those in work could not afford.” He warned that campaigners should “think twice” before challenging the government. “I sincerely hope CPAG will think twice before repeating this ridiculous and irresponsible behaviour in future,” he said. Anti-poverty groups were “shocked” by the outburst. Bob Holman, the community activist who has known the former Tory leader since he toured Glasgow’s Easterhouse scheme with him in 2002, said the cabinet secretary had cracked under the “pressure of daily criticism”. “It’s CPAG’s job and duty to challenge the government when it thinks that poor children are losing out. Going nuts is a sign of [Duncan Smith] cracking under the pressure of criticism. He’s just had the Institute of Fiscal Studies tell the world that there’ll be half a million more kids in poverty in this parliament. Unemployment is 2.5m. He’s losing his cool over CPAG. But he’s wrong.” Housing benefit provides means-tested support for the housing costs of 4.8 million poor families. Duncan Smith claimed that expenditure on housing benefit would reach £24.7bn by 2014/15 and that the new measures, amounting to £2.4bn in savings, were necessary. CPAG’s chief executive, Alison Garnham, said that she was “surprised” at the minister’s outburst. The case had been accepted as being valid in law back in July by the judge, the charity’s lawyers acted for free and the trial took a little over a day. “CPAG has a right to use the courts and we will continue to challenge government policy we believe to be unjust and unlawful,” Garnham said. She pointed out that it was not just the unemployed who would suffer. “This is not about jobless versus working families – it is precisely working families that will be hardest hit by this measure. For example, 80% of those claiming housing benefit in London are working. Savings may not be made either because, as has been pointed out by the office of the secretary of state for Communities and Local Government, an expensive burden is going to be placed on many Greater London authorities by increased homelessness and the relocation of families.” Iain Duncan Smith Housing benefit Communities Housing Benefits Welfare Randeep Ramesh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Revelation that PM’s chief policy adviser has been seen throwing away papers in public bin sparks concern over security risks The office of the Information Commissioner has confirmed it is investigating claims that the Conservative minister Oliver Letwin has been disposing of government documents in bins in a park close to Downing Street. The revelation that Letwin, David Cameron’s chief policy adviser, has been seen throwing away documents in the park on five occasions has sparked concern about potential security risks as well as data protection breaches. The Labour MP and shadow minister without portfolio Michael Dugher has written to the cabinet secretary, Gus O’Donnell, to demand an investigation into the classification of any discarded documents and whether strict procedures for the disposal of government documents were breached. The office of the Information Commissioner is examining whether a lax disposal of the documents could involve a breach of the Data Protection Act. A spokeswoman said: “We are aware of the allegations and are making inquiries. Keeping personal data secure is a key principle of the Data Protection Act, and the ICO takes any breach of that principle very seriously.” The Daily Mirror reported that Letwin discarded more than 100 papers, including correspondence on terrorism and national security and constituents’ private details. The paper described the Cabinet Office minister’s actions as a “security breach”, but a spokesman for Letwin insisted the papers were not of a sensitive nature. The spokesman said: “Oliver Letwin does some of his parliamentary and constituency correspondence in the park before going to work, and sometimes disposes of copies of letters there.” One of the documents thrown away by Letwin was said to describe how intelligence chiefs “failed to get the truth” about Britain’s involvement in terrorist interrogations. Dugher said: “This shows how out of touch Oliver Letwin and Conservatives really are. He and the rest of the Tory-led government are treating the public and their constituents with contempt by handling sensitive correspondence in this cavalier way.” In his letter to O’Donnell, Dugher wrote: “Civil servants are subject to disciplinary procedures if the proper processes are not adhered to. It cannot be that there is one rule for ministers and another for everyone else.” Letwin, the MP for West Dorset, is an early riser who does a morning circuit of St James’s Park, usually starting at 5.30am. In this period he dictates letters for typing by his secretary during the day. The Labour backbencher Jeremy Corbyn told Radio 5 Live that while he enjoyed the “idea of ministers walking around the park in the morning”, carrying confidential documents was wrong. “It’s a remarkably silly thing to do,” the MP for Islington North said. “I quite like the idea of a minister walking around the park in the morning and thinking about things and maybe reading papers – but to then dump them all in a bin is really very stupid, because he could easily be spotted and followed and anybody could then pick them up. “Whatever these documents were, that’s obviously wrong – but he could also be carrying around constituents’ letters, which are often highly personal and very confidential. “There are plenty of ways of getting rid of sensitive documents. All the parliamentary papers are shredded and so are the ones in the House of Commons and presumably the ministry as well.” The revelations present a further headache for Cameron in a week during which Downing Street has been forced onto the back foot over the defence secretary, Liam Fox. Zac Goldsmith, the Tory MP for Richmond, tweeted: “How is Oliver Letwin working in the park newsworthy?! Whoever in Labour has asked for (yet another) inquiry shd be put to sleep.” Oliver Letwin Conservatives Liberal-Conservative coalition Hélène Mulholland Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Fancy segregating EV charging stations by vehicle manufacturer? No? A slew of major automobile firms didn’t like the idea much either, and have agreed on a combined charging system to use as an international standard. Audi, BMW, Daimler, Ford, General Motors, Porsche and Volkswagen now support a single-port fast charging system that integrates all charging configurations — from spiffy quick charging setups, down to modest Level 1 rigs. The new system also crowns HomePlug Green PHY as the standard communication protocol, allowing charging stations to hook compatible EVs to Powerline Smart Grid applications. Where do all these fancy features leave you and your Leaf ? Charged, of course — the new “harmonized electric vehicle charging solution” promises to be backward compatible with current industry standard J1772 connectors. Hit the break for Ford’s official press release. Continue reading EV manufacturers get harmonized, agree to build a universal charging system EV manufacturers get harmonized, agree to build a universal charging system originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Oct 2011 06:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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