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It didn’t take a long, hard search to identify the heckler who continuously interrupted Anthony Weiner’s resignation speech yesterday. Benjy Bronk, a writer for the Howard Stern Show , proudly stepped forward and took to Twitter to explain why he jeered the congressman with questions like, “Are you more than seven…

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In a region rife with Facebook-fueled uprisings, Israelis have launched a modest revolt of their own—against the price of cottage cheese. By today, more than 75,000 people had joined a Facebook group vowing to boycott cottage cheese, a staple of the Israeli diet, until prices dropped. Even more…

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Dogs know when we’re paying attention to them—and when we’re looking the other way, a study suggests. Pairs of experimenters carrying treats stood equidistant from a dog and called out to it. One of the pair had her back to the dog, while the other faced it—and every…

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Rory McIlroy finally made a mistake, and even that wasn’t enough to make this US Open a fair fight. For 17 holes today, McIlroy systematically dissected the monstrous layout at Congressional and put the same kind of hurt on a US Open record book that doesn’t change easily. The 22-year-old…

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Godwin’s law alert: A union leader in New Jersey went just a bit overboard yesterday in a rally in front of the statehouse, repeatedly likening Governor Chris Christie to Adolf Hitler. “It took World War II to get rid of Adolf Hitler,” Communications Workers of America vice president Chris Shelton…

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Scientists may have discovered the key to keeping your locks colorful. Gray hair results from a missing “signaling” protein, called Wnt, in the melanocyte stem cells that help create one’s hair color, a new study suggests. Genetically manipulating Wnt may prevent the graying process—and researchers have already restored coloration…

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Apple has filed a patent on technology that could ensure you never see someone filming a concert or sporting event on an iPhone again. The technology would allow live event venues to install infrared transmitters that could trigger an infrared sensor in any iPhone held aloft within range, shutting off…

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Vietnam today started the first phase of a joint plan with former enemy the United States to clean up environmental damage leftover from the chemical defoliant Agent Orange, a lasting legacy from the Vietnam War. Vietnam’s Ministry of Defense will begin sweeping areas around the Danang airport, a former US…

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Republicans should be happy with this week’s debate for two reasons, writes Peggy Noonan in the Wall Street Journal . First, nobody showed up from “Crazytown.” More importantly, the candidates demonstrated a “new sobriety” on foreign policy. “There were no burly promises of victories around the corner and lights at the…

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Michael Gove pushes for return to more rigorous GCSE and A-level exams

Education secretary outlines plans to make exams tougher – and says he would welcome schools taking lessons from business The exam system in England and Wales needs reform, and for many subjects that means a return to traditional exams and less coursework, according to the education secretary, Michael Gove. In an interview in the Times, Gove says that, like Tony Blair, he is pushing the academy system. He goes on to say: “It has become easier to get an A at A-level or GCSE than it used to be, and that’s a problem … If you are doing art or geography, you’ve got to have a work of art or a field trip. But if you’re doing mathematics or English or French then the logical thing is to have a proper rigorous exam at the end of year 11 [GCSEs].” Gove said there had been previous attempts to make science relevant, by linking it to contemporary concerns such as climate change or food scares. But he said: “What [students] need is a rooting in the basic scientific principles, Newton’s laws of thermodynamics and Boyle’s law.” His daughter did not understand the way history was taught, Gove said, because it was not chronological: “My daughter does toys through the ages, then she does the Vikings, then the Greeks; and she gets confused.” He added: “We are now seeing with the new exams regulator how we can make GCSEs tougher. Exam boards need to sharpen up their act. We are also saying in GCSEs that you need to award marks for spelling, punctuation and grammar. We need to have stretching exams which compare with the world’s most rigorous.” Gove would welcome school heads taking a lesson from business: “We now have great headteachers who will become educational entrepreneurs. They will build a brand and create chains.” He said he would have no “ideological objection to profit-making institutions” in education – but schools did not need to be profit-making: “I think a profit motive would turn the academies movement from something that is all about philanthropy and generosity into something that was seen in a different light.” The education secretary also thinks that, in A-levels, state schools are suffering at the expense of private schools, which are opting for a more traditional-style exam, the Pre-U. He said: “If private schools are having an elite qualification and state schools are being left with a qualification that can’t match it, that is of profound concern to me, so we do need to do something to strengthen confidence in A-levels.” Schools Education policy GCSEs Michael Gove A-levels Jonathan Paige guardian.co.uk

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