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Helping your child through exams

At a glance

How to support your child through the stress of revision and exams

Assisting with revision

Students sitting an exam © 'Education Photos'
The secret to doing well in exams lies in planning. You can help your child to create a clear revision plan and method of studying that will make them feel in control of their work.
Tips for revision planning:
  • work out a revision timetable for each subject
  • break revision time into small chunks - hour-long sessions with short breaks at the end of each session often work well
  • make sure your child has all the essential books and materials
  • condense notes onto postcards to act as revision prompts
  • buy new stationery, highlighters and pens to make revision more interesting
  • go through school notes with your child or listen while they revise a topic
  • time your child's attempts at practice papers

Providing all-round support

The best way to support your child during the stress of revision and exams is to make home life as calm and pleasant as possible. It helps if other members of the household are aware that your child may be under pressure and that allowances should be made for this.
If your child is given study leave in the run-up to exams, try to be at home as much as possible so that you can share a break and a chat together.
Make sure there are plenty of healthy snacks in the fridge and try to provide good, nutritious food at regular intervals. Encourage your child to join family meals, even if it's a busy revision day - it's important to have a change of scene and get away from the books and computer for a while. Also encourage your child to take regular exercise. A brisk walk around the block can help clear the mind before the next revision session.
Try not to nag or make too many demands on your child during exam time. Arguments are counter-productive and will only add unnecessary stress and distract from revision.
It's important to get a good night's sleep before an exam, so discourage your child from staying up late to cram. And make sure he or she eats a good breakfast on the morning of the exam.

Bribes, treats and rewards

Some children are 'bribed' to do well in exams and are offered cash or gifts to achieve good grades. But bribery is not a good idea as it implies that the only worthwhile reward for hard work is money and that you don’t trust your child to work hard. Negative messages like these will affect your child’s sense of self-worth.
Encourage your child to do well for his or her own sake rather than for money or to please you. Explain that exams aren't an end in themselves but a gateway to the next stage of life - to another Key Stage or to GCSEs, A levels, university, college or work. Good results are themselves the best reward for hard work and will make your child proud of his or her achievements.
Make sure your child knows you're interested in their work and that you'll be proud if they do well. Although bribery isn't advisable, it's fine to provide small treats by way of encouragement - perhaps a piece of cake or some biscuits after a chunk of revision has been completed. The end of exams can be celebrated with a treat that everyone can look forward to, such as a meal out or a trip to the cinema.
via:www.bbc.co.uk/

Willetts forced on to back foot over premium rate university places

May 2011 14.38 BST

Universities minister issues statement to clarify intentions as critics say proposal to let rich students pay premium fees to get places at top universities will 'entrench privilege'

David Willetts, who wants to let wealthy students pay premium fees to get places at top universities
David Willetts, who wants to let the wealthiest students pay premium fees to get places at top universities. Photograph: Leon Neal/AFP/Getty Images

David Willetts, the universities minister, has insisted there is "no question" of wealthy students being able to buy a university place after facing criticism over proposals to allow teenagers from the wealthiest families to be able to pay for extra places at the most competitive universities.

Willetts had earlier sought to stress that the move would free up more publicly subsidised places for undergraduates from poorer homes and improve social mobility.

But critics said the move would entrench privilege and turn back the clock to a time when "breeding not brains" mattered, with the Liberal Democrat MP and party president, Tim Farron, warning that he would oppose any measure that gave the appearance of increasing university access for the rich.

Downing Street swiftly distanced itself from any suggestion that it was backing plans for students with rich parents be given priority access to university as a way of expanding the overall number of university places and university income.

No 10 did not rule out a limited version of the idea appearing in the university white paper, due this summer, but stressed that no proposal would be backed if it reduced social mobility.

"We are listening to proposals about what we would do in the white paper to ensure we improve access to higher education," a No 10 spokesman said.

The business secretary, Vince Cable, said he was willing to look at how to expand off-quota places through company sponsorships, but stressed that he did not support the children of the rich being given priority access to university.

By lunchtime, Willetts had issued a statement to insist there was "no question" of wealthy students being able to buy a place at university. "Access to a university must be based on ability to learn not ability to pay," the universities minister said.

Under current government plans, annual student numbers are capped to keep costs down, with English universities allowed to charge UK students a maximum annual fee of £9,000 from 2012, which graduates do not have to start paying until they are earning £21,000 a year.

Willetts sparked controversy when he suggested in an interview with the Guardian that universities could increase the numbers of British students by charging some the full annual fees of up to £28,000 a year for the most expensive courses, payable up front, who would not then require the support of the taxpayer.

The changes would give more students the chance to attend their first choice university, a suggestion that many see as enabling the children of the wealthiest parents to buy their way in.

The move is being considered at a time when the government is cutting 10,000 publicly funded university places.

Employers and charities will also be encouraged to sponsor off-quota places under the plans to be outlined in the white paper.

Earlier in the day, Willetts had told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: "People are coming to us with innovative ideas about how you could liberalise the system so it was possible for extra people to get to university.

"These are people who we wish to go to university and who, sadly, are being turned away at the moment just because there aren't enough places.

"We would need to have a set of criteria, if this went ahead, that absolutely passed muster as improving social mobility.

"I start from the view that, by and large, more people going to university is a good thing for social mobility. Anything that we did if this does go forward would have to pass the test of improving social mobility, not reversing it."

In a sign of the Liberal Democrats' determination to assert more directly their differences with the Conservatives following the elections debacle, Farron, the MP for Westmorland and Lonsdale, said higher education should be "free at the point of use" for everyone who can benefit from university.

The MP – whose party took a hit at the polls last Thursday for the party's U-turn on tuition fee rises – told BBC News any proposal that looked like increasing university access for the rich would not get his backing.

"If that is the case, then that would be completely wrong and I would be against such a move," he said. "If it's about making sure we increase places for people of poorer backgrounds, that's something that's worth looking at.

"The real difficulty – one of the reasons why I voted against the fee rise last year – is not so much the unfairness of the package but how it appears to people out there."

Farron added: "Higher education should be free at the point of use and that people who are able to benefit from a university education should be able to do so.

"I hugely regret there are tuition fees at all, never mind the higher ones we currently have. It's right that we should explore ways that people from less well-off backgrounds [can] have the best possible access to higher education."

The UCU general secretary, Sally Hunt, said: "Far from increasing social mobility, it is hard to see how this is anything other than the government entrenching privilege for the wealthy in response to its failing university fees policy.

"We risk turning the clock back to a time when breeding rather than brains were required to get on in life. The news is particularly embarrassing for the Liberal Democrats as all their MPs pledged to vote, and campaign, against higher fees."

 

Aaron Porter, president of the National Union of Students (NUS), said the move would create a "two-tier system" in university education.

"The government is yet again tossing out a poorly conceived policy idea in an attempt to disguise the chaos it has created in university funding and the shortfall in finances that has created," he said.

"This creates a two-tier system that allows the richest, less able applicants a second bite at the university cherry and denies low- and middle-income students the same opportunity."

John Denham, the shadow business secretary, who has raised the issue in an urgent question in the Commons this afternoon, said low-income teenagers would have no chance of getting the extra university places created by Willetts's latest plan.

Willetts denied suggestions that the scheme would allow less qualified applicants to get to a good university by the backdoor.

"I don't think that would be fair," he told Today. "That's why one of the crucial criteria would be that people have to have the same high academic standards."

Willetts later issued a clarifying statement, saying: "We will only consider allowing off-quota places where it contributes to the coalition commitment to improve social mobility and increase fair access.

"There is no question of wealthy students being able to buy a place at university. Access to a university must be based on ability to learn not ability to pay."

He added: "We have been discussing the idea of charitable donors and employers endowing additional places on a needs-blind basis which will be a subject for consultation in the higher education white paper."

The proposal is most likely to be taken up by highly selective institutions, which turn away thousands of qualified candidates a year. Oxford accepted slightly more than 3,000 British and EU undergraduates out of about 17,000 who applied for the current academic year.

That demand is due to intensify as the latest application figures show the number of candidates for this autumn has risen by 2.1% to about 633,000 – another record high.

The places may not be covered by access agreements, under which universities are required to outline how they will improve their proportion of students from state schools and deprived backgrounds.

Under one version of the scheme, universities might operate a "needs-blind" admissions process, which assesses all candidates regardless of their ability to pay, but then offers places off-quota to candidates from the most privileged homes.

The expansion of places will put greater pressure on less popular universities. Ministers have warned that undersubscribed institutions could have government-funded places withdrawn.

via guardian.co.uk

 

University snub for 'anti-Israel' playwright Tony Kushner | Stage

Honorary degree planned by John Jay College is vetoed by pro-Israeli trustee at City University of New York

Thursday 5 May 2011 19.11 BST

Tony Kushner
Jewish playwright Tony Kushner's honorary degree from City University of New York has been blocked by pro-Israeli activist Jeffrey Wiesenfeld, a university trustee. Photograph: Brendan Mcdermid/Reuters

A row has broken out at a leading New York university because its board blocked a decision to give an honorary degree to the award-winning Jewish playwright Tony Kushner after coming under pressure from an activist who accused him of being anti-Israel.

John Jay College, part of City University of New York, had planned to grant Kushner the honour but was vetoed at a board meeting in the face of criticism from pro-Israeli activist Jeffrey Wiesenfeld, a university trustee.

Wiesenfeld claimed that Kushner, who wrote the Pulizter prize-winning play Angels in America, had a history of saying that Israel had been founded by a policy of ethnic cleansing, been critical of the Israeli defence forces and advocated a boycott of the country.

"There's a lot of disingenuousness and non-intellectual activity directed against the state of Israel on campuses across the country," Wiesenfeld said, citing descriptions of Kushner's views that he admitted he found on the website of Norman Finkelstein, an academic who has been critical of Israel. After Wiesenfeld spoke the CUNY board voted to remove Kushner's name from a slate of candidates set to get an honorary degree. The remaining names on the slate were then passed.

Kushner, whose latest play is on Broadway, is one of the most famous and acclaimed names in modern American theatre. Angels in America, which is his best known piece, dealt with the Aids crisis in 1980s America. The play features people being persecuted for their political views, a theme that recurs elsewhere in his work.

In an open letter to the newspaper Jewish Week, Kushner responded furiously to the news that the honour had been withheld and revealed that he had not been told there would be any opposition to his award. "As far as I know, no one who might have spoken on my behalf was notified in advance. I'm not a difficult person to find, nor am I lacking in articulate colleagues and friends who would have responded," he said.

He denied the allegations by Wiesenfeld, who has a history of accusing academic institutions of being anti-Israel. Kushner said that he did not support a boycott of Israel and had always supported the Jewish state's right to exist.

"My opinion about the wisdom of the creation of a Jewish state has never been expressed in any form without a strong statement of support for Israel's right to exist and my ardent wish that it continue to do so," he said, adding that he was "very proud to be Jewish".

The controversy is not the university's first involving Wiesenfeld. In February Brooklyn College, another CUNY campus, fired Kristofer Petersen-Overton from a teaching post after objections were raised by Wiesenfeld and others about his views on Israel and the Middle East. In that case Wiesenfeld directly lobbied CUNY's chancellor, Matthew Goldstein, along with local Brooklyn politician Dov Hikind, to get the academic removed from his post. However, after a furious row in the media Petersen-Overton was reappointed.

A spokesman for CUNY did not return a call asking for comment.

• This article was amended on 6 May 2011. The original referred to

via guardian.co.uk

 

Fall in UK adults engaged in learning, survey finds

man on computer  
The fall in the number of male adult learners represents a particular challenge, says the charity

The number of adult learners in the UK has fallen - with a particular decline among men, an annual survey suggests.

This year's National Institute of Adult Continuing Education survey - of 4,957 people - found a slight fall in adults in learning, down from 21% to 20%.

But there was concern that the number of men who had been in learning in the past three years had fallen to 37% - the lowest level since the mid-1990s.

This was a "fundamental challenge for policy makers", the charity said.

The annual survey from National Institute of Adult Continuing Education (NIACE) - a charity which promotes adult learning - asked respondents to assess whether or not they identified themselves as a learner.

It was based on a survey of 4,957 people in the UK aged 17 and over carried out in February and March.

The type of "learning" could be formal, work-based, online or self-directed and covers a range of areas from academic subjects to recreational activities.

'Learning society'

The results indicated that the number of men who have been in learning over the past three years (37%) is at its lowest level since the NIACE survey began in 1996.

Participation in learning among those in the least skilled jobs and those outside the labour market fell seven percentage points from 2010 from 30% to 23%.

The most concerning aspects of this year's survey are the lowest ever figures of participation for men”

End Quote Alan Tuckett NIACE chief executive

Professional and managerial groups were twice as likely (52%) to participate in learning than the unskilled and unemployed.

But younger learners were on the increase - with participation in learning increasing among those aged 17 to 24, up from 58% in 2010 to 71% this year.

This is set against a decrease across all other age groups, with learning activities for adults aged 65 to 74 dropping from 23% last year to 17% in 2011.

NIACE chief executive Alan Tuckett said: "If Britain is to recover economically it has to invest in the whole of its workforce, not just the young.

"With an ageing labour force we need to encourage people to prolong their active working and learning lives, reducing learning opportunities will hardly help with the well-being or work-readiness of Britain's third age adults.

"But overall, the most concerning aspects of this year's survey are the lowest ever figures of participation for men and for the least skilled and those outside the labour market.

"When you take these findings, with the reported decline in people's intentions to take up learning in the future, you have a fundamental challenge for policy makers, employers and providers.

"We won't have a learning society unless everyone takes their share of responsibility to create it."

via bbc.co.uk

 

Arab societies need to invest in anti-sectarian education

10 May 2011 17.00 BST

Repressive regimes have long exploited sectarian tensions. For democracy to flourish, pluraTuesday

Syrian women living in Jordan paint their face with the Syrian national flag in Amman
Syrian women living in Jordan painted with the Syrian flag protest against Bashar al-Assad at their embassy in Amman. Photograph: Muhammad Hamed/Reuters

Revolutions alone do not bring about democratic secular societies and, unless this is recognised, Arab states will continue to be trapped by a cycle of internal tension that politicians are only too willing to exploit.

So long as sectarian tensions are bubbling beneath the surface of Arab society, the threat of civil conflict will always be a possibility – one frightening enough to paralyse any opposition to the ruling elite. It is through the manipulation of these sentiments that certain Arab leaders have managed to cling on for so long. Now, Arab societies must invest in education to prevent such tensions being passed to future generations.

On Saturday, Syrian tanks loyal to President Bashar al-Assad surrounded the predominantly Sunni coastal city of Banias. There are also claims by activists that the Syrian army is mainly targeting Sunni districts in a bid by the Syrian government to ignite sectarian tensions and divide the opposition against it.

There is no denying that as the protests have developed since the beginning of March the rhetoric of the Syrian government has turned more and more sectarian. Syrian state media has continuously accused protesters of a sectarian plot led by Salafist extremists (an ultra-conservative branch of Sunni Islam) intent on gaining control of the secular Syrian society.

This narrative is designed to incite the sectarian sentiments of the Sunnis and bring fear to the Alawite minority, which the president himself is part of, as well as the Christians and the Druze. The same narrative is also likely to have gained strength in post-revolutionary Egypt on Sunday, as a group of Salafists clashed with Coptic Christians. The relative success of this narrative in inciting fear and tension within Syrian society – the homogeneity of which is often praised and held as an example in the region – is extremely alarming.

The Syrian example is not unique. The protests in Bahrain, which began as a relatively unified defiance of the ruling Sunni monarchy, were soon rephrased by the state and its media as an isolated Shia conspiracy, backed by Iran. Similarly in Iraq, now categorised as a "democracy", the recent protests against corruption were labelled as Ba'athist by a government willing to play on a history of fear to paralyse a largely nationalist opposition composed of Sunnis, Shias and Kurds.

The sad case of Iraq demonstrates too well the dangers of sectarian tensions, as Iraqi society has been involved in a vicious cycle of political manipulation before and after the 2003 invasion, with sectarian resentments peaking during the civil conflict in 2006. The invasion of Iraq also ushered in a political institutionalisation of sectarian identity that risked rephrasing politics in terms of sectarian concerns rather than national interests.

Similarly, in Lebanon, the structure of the political system encourages sectarianism in wider society.

These examples show that in any post-revolutionary (or indeed post-conflict) society, democracy can only flourish if deep-seated attitudes concerning sectarianism and identity are addressed.

If we look at the history of racism, slavery and antisemitism in the west, it becomes evident that education played an important role in developing tolerance and understanding of "differences" as well as promoting human rights. With the rise of multiculturalism in Europe, education in primary schools has played an essential role in teaching children about equality and discouraging prejudice. While it is important not to overstate the level of tolerance or lack of tension in multicultural communities in Europe, the significant development of social attitudes in the last 52 years is undeniable, with education playing a key role.

A promising start to addressing sectarianism at an early stage in life is the Play It Fair educational programme, launched last week in Lebanon by various NGOs. The programme aims to promote human rights and tolerance to encourage children to "peacefully coexist".

The significance of a programme such as this is that it is developed and taught by grassroots organisations and volunteers, rather than by a state-controlled education system. What's more, whereas previous attempts to control sectarian sentiments have involved the suppression of certain identities by the state – for instance in pre-2003 Iraq – programmes such as this aim instead to provide the skills necessary to live in a pluralistic society where different identities and beliefs do exist.

It is true that such educational programmes do not address the sectarian structures in political systems such as those in Iraq and Lebanon, and therefore cannot exist as an isolated tool for reform. However, they can play an important role in altering the attitudes of future generations, likely to be scarred by the sectarian conflicts of today.

Whether or not this programme will have a significant effect in breaking the cycle of sectarianism, it is a step – one that has yet to be tested in the Middle East and one that is certainly worth a shot in the current climate of the region.

via guardian.co.uk

 

Charlie Gilmour pleads guilty to student protest disorder charges

Son of Pink Floyd frontman enters non-specific guilty plea and is granted bail to finish his exams at Cambridge University

Friday 6 May 2011 11.51 BST

Charlie Gilmour, pictured in February, said he was 'caught up in the moment' during the protests.
Charlie Gilmour, pictured outside court in February, said he was 'caught up in the moment' during the protests. Photograph: Lewis Whyld/PA

The son of Pink Floyd guitarist and singer David Gilmour has admitted going on the rampage at a student fees protest.

Charlie Gilmour was warned he could face a prison term after pleading guilty to violent disorder. He was granted bail until July to give him time to complete Cambridge University exams.

Gilmour was accused of a string of offences during the riot on 9 December. He entered a non-specific guilty plea as he appeared at Kingston crown court, south-west London.

The 21-year-old, from Billingshurst, West Sussex, has yet to specify whether he admits leaping on the bonnet of a car carrying royal protection officers escorting the Prince of Wales and his wife to the Royal Variety Performance.

Judge Nicholas Price QC granted Gilmour conditional bail as he adjourned proceedings until 8 July.

He said he would give Gilmour's legal team time to decide the specifics of the plea before arranging another hearing.

Gilmour, a former model, wore a grey suit and dark tie as he spoke to confirm his name and enter a guilty plea.

Price told Gilmour: "You have accepted counts of a serious matter and it may well be the course of one of immediate custody.

"This matter will come back to this court on 8 July."

Gilmour is accused of smashing a window at a high street store and throwing a rubbish bin at the royal convoy. The bin missed the royal couple but hit another car, it is alleged. Gilmour had been accused of stealing a mannequin leg but that charge was withdrawn.

He was among thousands of people who protested in Trafalgar Square and Parliament Square on 9 December and was photographed hanging from a union flag on the Cenotaph during the march.

He issued an apology the day after the demonstrations, describing it as a "moment of idiocy", and added that he did not realise the Whitehall monument commemorated Britain's war dead.

Gilmour's biological father is poet and playwright Heathcote Williams but he was adopted by the rock star when his mother, writer and journalist Polly Samson, remarried.

Releasing a statement in the wake of the cenotaph incident, Gilmour said: "I feel nothing but shame. My intention was not to attack or defile the cenotaph. Running along with a crowd of people who had just been violently repelled by the police, I got caught up in the spirit of the moment."

David Gilmour's former bandmate Roger Waters lost his father in the second world war and has written about his loss extensively throughout his career, including in a number of Pink Floyd songs.

Gilmour has been on the books of the modelling agency Select Model Management and has also tried his hand as a journalist but is now completing a history degree at Girton College, Cambridge.

His father is admired as one of the world's finest guitarists. The Pink Floyd album Dark Side Of The Moon is one of the biggest-selling releases of all time.

In an interview last year Gilmour talked about being bought two Savile Row suits before he headed off to university.

A Cambridge University spokesman has said the matter is "for the civil authorities".

via guardian.co.uk