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Childcare Buggysnuggle


Manufacturer: The Buggysnuggle Company Ltd


The essential resource for anyone teaching 0-18 years


Tel: 01869 340694 Web: www.buggysnuggle.com Price: £39.95 Age range: Up to 3 years


Description: The original award winning Buggysnuggle Cosytoes is unique, designed to fit all makes of pushchairs and buggies. It is extremely quick and easy to fit, meaning no awkward threading of shoulder-to-waist straps, and stays in the pushchair when folded. It is machine washable and muddy feet can stick out at the bottom. The Buggysnuggle makes the scruffiest of pushchairs look like new!


Score: 90.8%


What the testers said: “This item fulfils its purpose perfectly, snuggly with lovely soft and easy-to-wash fabric. It kept the child nice and warm and looked great as a liner. The bright colours made it very attractive to the children and there is a large range of colours and designs to choose from. We absolutely loved the teddy pocket, it is a great idea that I have not seen before. A great product that can really personalise a pram.”


The online home of leading titles in


early years, primary and secondary education


January 2012 Issue 132


early years educator February 2012 £4.50 September 2011 £3.99


January 2012 Issue 132


www.earlyyearseducator.co.uk The monthly magazine for the 0-5 team The monthly for childminders, nannies and childcarers


Constructing dens for outdoor games


Top tips for tackling problem behaviour


Focus on inclusion and diversity


01 coverFeb 12 eye.indd 2


Outstanding support for baby room staff


Improve early diagnosis of autism


16 PAGE PRACTICAL ACTIVITIES PULL-OUT SECTION INSIDE 09/12/2011 15:55


Create your own castle!


The joy of jigsaw play


Now incorporating Child Care magazine www.practicalpreschool.com


The art of words: Painting stories for creative development


Preparing


for school: books and routines!


B is for blueberry: Grow an alphabet garden


Practical pages linked to the EYFS 01 CC COVER SEPT 11.indd 1 08/08/2011 10:45


PRIMARY TEACHER


Supporting the teaching team in delivering best practice £3.99


FEBRUARY 2012 www.primaryteacherupdate.co.uk


Forest School experience: Why risk-taking matters


www.fivetoseven.co.uk The only magazine exclusively for key stage 1 teachers 5to7 five to seven educator Reading Explorers


A Guided Skills-Based Journey is a series of books aimed at developing key reading and study skills.


This brilliant new series provides teachers with a wide variety of genres, both


fi ction and non-fi ction, which will allow children to access, interpret and understand what they are reading.


It increases the child’s knowledge and understanding of why certain words are chosen by an author. It gives the reader the chance to speculate on the tone and purpose of the texts, as well as consider both the texts’ themes and audience.


August/September 2011 £3.99 The fi ve thinking and reasoning skills contained in the programme are: Sight and sound:


* Literal thinking * Deductive reasoning * Inferential skills


Sensory play in class


Raising boys’ achievements


Top tips for telling stories Explore maths


at the races NQT special  Job shadowing abroad  Calculations poster 01 PTU FEB 12_cover.indd 1 14/12/2011 15:41


Flying high – transglobal learning


* Evaluative assessment of texts


* Study Skills which promote wider independent study The fi ve books contained in the series are:


• Year 2 (Ages 6-7) • Year 3 (Ages 7-8) • Year 4 (Ages 8-9) • Year 5 (Ages 9-10) • Year 6 (Ages 10-11)


Each book is matched to the new National Literacy Strategy’s Framework for Teaching. Many of the texts are cross-curricular and take in aspects such as science, history and PSHE.


Each book features a CD-ROM with the texts differentiated at upper and lower levels of ability. It also contains detailed lesson plans which encourage wipe board and kinaesthetic activities.


NQT special: Supporting


best practice N 9819039


Perfect partnerships with support assistants


Reading explorers NEW cover.indd1 1 01 5to7 COVER_AUG.indd 1 28/06/2011 16:27 A division of MA Education Ltd 9  8 1 9 0   3 9    A division of MA Education Ltd A division of MA Education Ltd John Murray 8/10/09 11:39:30 01rone.indd 1 Fundraising January 2012.indd 1 21/12/2011 11:48 0/09/2011 11:2


How to identify ADHD


Solving problems at the ‘supermarket’


The monthly for Early Years Foundation Stage practitioners, childminders, nannies and childcarers


01 PPS January 2012.indd 1 13/12/2011 13:00 www.practicalpreschool.com


Gold Award


Baby Shade


Manufacturer: ShadeMe Tel: 01460 258040


Web: www.shademe.co.uk Price: £25.00


Age range: From birth


Reading Explorers A Guided Skills-Based Journey Year 4


Inference


Fundraising for Schools


January 2012 Issue 130


Free schools in England set for extra £600m


By Sue Learner


The funding boost was announced by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne.


Some of the new specialist maths free schools for 16 to 18-year-olds will offer pure mathematics while others will combine maths with other subjects such as physics, chemistry or computer science. The schools will have freedom over the curriculum and teachers’ pay and conditions and gifted teenagers will compete for places at the selective maths schools.


The Government wants the 12 maths schools to be open by 2015 and hopes


In this issue News and grant reminders Grants and awards Donors Sports


Collaboration


the new free schools will create a new generation of mathematicians and establish England as a world leader in the field, boosting the economy and stimulating growth in the long-term. It wants university maths departments and academics to run the schools.


Chancellor George Osborne, said: ‘The expansion of the free schools scheme, under which parents, teachers and voluntary groups can apply to set up state-funded schools, is designed to make England a world leader in maths, which ministers regard as a vital field to give the economy a long-term boost.’


1-2 3-9


10-11 12-13 14-15


About Fundraising For Schools 16


He told the House of Commons: ‘This will give our most talented young mathematicians the chance to flourish. These ‘Maths Free Schools’ are exactly what Britain needs to match our competitors – and produce more of the engineering and science graduates so important for our longer term economic success.’


One 16 to 19 free school – the London Academy for Excellence – has already been approved and will open in September 2012.


Your practical guide to raising money Grant


reminders


Comenius Grants Amount of award Up to €25,000


The Government has pledged to spend more than £600m on building 100 new free schools over the next three years, with 12 of them specialising in maths for sixth formers.


Deadline 20 February 2012


Contact details www.britishcouncil.org/comenius- school-partnerships.htm


Large Grants


Amount of award Up to £3,000


Deadline 4 May 2012


Contact details www.ford.co.uk/fbtrust


Horizons Award Amount of award Up to £700


Deadline 20 April 2012


Contact details www.bosch.co.uk/ technologyhorizons/14-18/


Oglesby Trust


Amount of award Up to £20,000


Deadline Ongoing


Contact details www.oglesbycharitabletrust.co.uk


Fundraising for Schools January 2012 1 JOIN TODAY covers 1.indd 1


Applying to HE Timeline for 2012


The perfect application


Best


practice advice


SecEd 02/09/2011 12:33 How to help your students excel in the university applications process SecEd The ONLY weekly voice for secondary education Inside this issue


Win a trip to California!


SecEd is offering one student and a teacher or parent the work experience trip of a lifetime – a week with the ICT gurus of Lightspeed Systems at their Californian HQ Page 14


UCAS: A guide for applying to HE Published with


this edition, SecEd's latest supplement will help you to guide your students as they apply


to university, including the perfect


application and the latest on fees. If your copy is missing, email editor@sec-ed.co.uk


Listening to year 7


Professor Mick Waters looks at the importance of student voice to support transition in year 7 – and offers some tips Page 11


SecEdonline 1108054 NASUWT Advert_Layout 1 24/08/2011 10:00 Page 1


For regular news updates and our full editorial archive, visit www.sec-ed.co.uk. You can also sign up to receive SecEddigital, a virtual edition of SecEd, by emailing editor@ sec-ed.co.uk and we can be found on Twitter at www. twitter.com/SecEd_Education


Academy head slams ‘incompetence’ of DfE


Exclusive by Dorothy Lepkowska


The headteachers of some newly converted academies have still not received their budgets for the current school year, prompting fears over job losses and cuts to courses. Some schools that converted in


the spring and were given interim funding from April to August have still not received a full budget for their financial year, which began this month. This week, one accused the


Department for Education (DfE) of “incompetence on the highest level” after being told he would have to wait until November. Hugh Bellamy, headteacher


of South Dartmoor Community College in Devon, was informed only on August 22 that he would receive another short-term budget because information required to finalise his annual funding was still not available. Unlike maintained schools,


which are funded in accordance with the financial year beginning in April, academies receive fund- ing for the academic year starting September. He told SecEd: “Having to wait


until August for our annual budget was already putting us in difficulty because we didn’t know wheth- er we would be able to continue employing staff who were on short- term contracts. “As a result, I have not been


away during the summer as I’ve been waiting for these financial details to arrive so I could make any strategic decisions – such as telling people that they did not have a job to come back to.” But two and half weeks ago he was advised that information


required from local authorities about devolved funding had still not been calculated and Mr Bellamy was given another interim budget until November 1. Mr Bellamy added: “The whole


situation has been compounded by the fact that (education secretary) Michael Gove has reduced the amount of carry forward for acad- emies to two per cent, compared with five per cent for maintained schools, so we haven’t been able to hold money back for this sort of eventuality. “If there is a cold draught in


November we haven’t got the money to draw on.” Furthermore, the time lapse


in receiving the full year’s budget means that some staff employed on 12-month contracts will have exceeded a year in employment and may be eligible for redundancy. Closer analysis of the school’s


interim budget also revealed that the per-pupil funding was based on old figures, even though the school had provided officials with the most recent data. This has left the school with about £50,000 less than it was expecting. Mr Bellamy added: “It is an


absolute mess. We were told becoming an academy would free us up but I feel more constrained than ever as we are not being provided with the information on which to make important strategic decisions. “The Conservatives have had 10


years in opposition to sort out this policy and get the strategy together. But there is clearly no capacity to run this properly.” He said there was no immedi-


ate risk to the jobs of teaching assistants and other support staff, and some marginal courses may be begun but not continued beyond November.


He continued: “Staff are aware


they are in a vulnerable situation. We won’t get rid of anyone in September and it will be business as usual but we cannot know what will happen beyond November. I won’t in all conscience be able to advise staff not to take alternative jobs that are offered to them because I just don’t know if I will be able to keep them on. “This is incompetence by the


DfE on the highest level.” Meanwhile, Liz Allen,


headteacher of Newstead Wood School in Bromley, south London, which also became an academy in April, said the school was missing some funding because LACSEG (Local Authority Central Spend Equivalent Grant) information had not yet been finalised with the local authority. She told SecEd: “Although the


DfE has the correct January 2011 SEN numbers, it has taken the overall pupil numbers from January 2010, which leaves us 26 pupils down. “This is a big concern. Our


6th form is expanding and we have to accept that the funding lags one academic year behind. So we have educated these students through year 12 with no funding and we just can’t do it for another year. “We have registered a query but


have had no response to date.” A DfE spokesman told SecEd:


“There is an issue at a small number of academies where the department is still in the process of verifying the data with local authorities. “We have agreed that the Young


People’s Learning Agency will provide interim funding based on previously held data, and will ensure that every academy gets their appropriate funding later in the autumn.”


Taking flight: Angel Romaeo, 14, won three medals at this week's UK School Games. See page 2 for more


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pay NO SUBSCRIPTION until 2012* Online www.nasuwt.org.uk or


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*If you join the NASUWT and agree to pay your 2012 subscription by direct debit, you will receive immediate fullmembership benefits for the rest of 2011 totally FREE! UK news  SecEd: On Your Side  Psycho babble  NQT diary  Union address  Managing ICT  At the chalkface


Containing thousands of professional articles, lesson plan ideas, news, reports and exclusive features


what you’ve been missing! Log-on and see


What the testers said: “A fantastic product that fits anything! We used it on a variety of buggies and


carrycots and it was always easy to attach. It


comes with its own storage bag which is extremely useful for when it is not in use. It kept little ones cool and shaded, protecting them from


Practical Pre-School Awards 2012 29 Score: 90.0%


Issue 291 • September 8 2011 Price £1.00 www.sec-ed.com


Description: Made from an SPF50+ fabric, the baby Shade fits easily to most strollers, car seats, carry cots and prams with an existing hood, extending the shade and keeping baby sheltered from the sun’s harmful rays. Unlike other pram shades on the market, this shade fits on practically every pram shape – even rear-facing products.


the sun on hot summer days. Knowing that it is made from SPF50+ fabric gave us peace


of mind when out in the sun.”


FREE POSTER!


FREE Literacy poster


Reading Explorers A Guided Skills-Based Journey – Year 4


John Murray


UPDATE


Childcare


New!


Study Skills


Deductive


Literal


Featuring CD-ROM with differentiated activities


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