England’s school catch-up tsar resigns in protest
He says the government is failing to pull out the stops
I N FEBRUARY THE government appointed Sir Kevan Collins, a former teacher, council boss and head of an education charity, to advise it on how to help children catch up on learning lost as a result of the covid-19 pandemic. Boris Johnson, the prime minister, said he was “absolutely determined” no child would be held back by the crisis. Just four months later, on June 2nd, Sir Kevan resigned as “education-recovery commissioner” because of a lack of ministerial determination.
This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “F for effort”
Britain June 5th 2021
- Boris Johnson seeks a state fit for crisis
- The fight to define the great British garden
- Rishi Sunak is worried about rising interest rates. He should relax
- MPs are returning to Parliament in a rebellious mood
- England’s school catch-up tsar resigns in protest
- London is starting to build more council homes
- Boris Johnson’s government wants more patriotic cultural institutions
- A parallel society is developing in parts of Muslim Britain
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