
International Baccalaureate diploma pause devastating
'Unreasonable and devastating'
"I get more angry as I think about it because it seems quite unreasonable and really quite devastating," Shea said."It feels a bit like a personal violation letting us know so late, although the actual final choice was made the day we found out, I think education [The Committee for Education, Sport and Culture] could've gone about it in a better way. "They could've let the school know earlier so that we could have more time to decide what we'll do next."Ben, who wants to go to Cambridge University, said he could not think of a "single benefit" of pausing the diploma.He said: "There is no logical pathway that I can go down, from the start of this year when we were given International Baccalaureate as an option and all encouraged to do it, to it being cut off to all of us in such a quick space of time."
President of the committee, Deputy Andrea Dudley-Owen, said there was not enough uptake for the course to be viable."The International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme has been and remains a valued part of our Sixth Form Centre's curriculum for some years now."However the educational experience of the students, with so few in each class, with the inevitable transfer of some students to other subject areas at the beginning of these courses, would have been suboptimal. "With this decision to pause the diploma, school leaders can now use staff more effectively to make a wider impact across education."
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The Guardian
2 days ago
- The Guardian
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The Guardian
2 days ago
- The Guardian
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The Herald Scotland
3 days ago
- The Herald Scotland
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There's a smart slogan doing the rounds these days: Your enemies don't come in small boats, but private jets. In the feudal past, the rich assaulted and raped the poor. Today, our news is filled with the crimes of multi-millionaire sex offenders like Donald Trump's friend Jeffrey Epstein. What makes today so different, though, to times long gone when the poor rose up to defend themselves is that the rich have managed to divide us as never before. Most media - dominated by the billionaire class - manufactures culture wars pitting ordinary citizens against each other. Better to have us at our own throats, than at theirs. If we cleared the smoke from our eyes, we'd realise we can change what's happening before it's too late. For change must come. This can't continue. And far better for peaceable than violent change. I began with a statistic of sheer despair: the matched inequality of America and slaving-owning Rome. Here's another statistic. It comes from Oxfam. 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