ar

Music: Swedish Philharmonia/Martin, Usher Hall, Edinburgh, four stars

Music




ar

Theatre: The Beaches of St Valery, Oran Mor, Glasgow, Four stars

Theatre




ar

Janey Godley: 'Women my age are told we don’t know how to work the internet but I showed these kids how it’s done'

Brian Beacom




ar

Theatre & Dance with Mark Brown

The Metamorphosis




ar

Alison Rowat: Questions everywhere but where are answers we need?

ONE of the few benefits of living in the Unprecedented Era is having the chance to experience life at another time and in a different place.




ar

The Andrew Marr Show, Ridge on Sunday, review

EVERY crime fiction fan will be familiar with the good cop-bad cop routine. One officer is friendly with a suspect to secure their cooperation, the other plays hard ball; one cop is a stickler for the rules, the other is a maverick.




ar

The Andrew Marr Show, Ridge on Sunday, review

HOW does an opposition oppose without appearing to oppose for opposition’s sake? That is the tricky situation in which Labour now finds itself as the death toll from coronavirus reaches a horrific new high.




ar

Opinion: Alison Rowat: Blistering start for Starmer at virtual Prime Minister's Questions

STRANGE things you never thought would come to pass. Queueing to enter a supermarket. Being thrilled by the sight of the bin lorry arriving. Making your own surgical mask. These days. But the oddest thing of all? Being glad to see politicians.




ar

Opinion, Alison Rowat: Trust, like patience and the right gear, is running out

ONE trusts the stork’s passage across London was peaceful, its job of delivering Baby Johnson to his delighted parents made easier by the emptiness of the skies. Congratulations and welcome, young man.




ar

Harvard Business Review, MBA Lessons Guide Principals' Ed-Tech Leadership

Effective management approaches are not skills principals typically learn through the traditional pathways of education. To fill the gap, they are turning to business programs and publications.




ar

Common-Core Deal in Florida Sparks Legal Feud

The Florida Department of Education is in a bitter dispute with a software company it hired to create online resources aligned with the standards for teachers and students.




ar

K-12 Marketplace Sees Major Flow of Venture Capital

Industry observers attribute the rise to heightened interest in ed-tech initiatives, decreasing technology costs, and the move to Common Core standards.




ar

Ed. Startups Navigate the Hard Market Realities for Sustaining Success

Following the thrill of launching new businesses, two ed-tech startups are facing the challenges of making smart decisions to attract more customers and grow revenues.




ar

N.Y.C.-IBM Partnership Focuses on Students' Tech. Skills

The public-private initiative between the technology company and a city school aims to prepare students for future careers.




ar

Flood of Investment, Products Stirs Fears of Education 'Tech Bubble'

Analysts and business officials wonder if the education technology market faces the risk of a crash, similar to what occurred during the dot-com bust in the 1990s.




ar

Billion-Dollar Deal Heats Up Ed-Tech Market

A private equity company plans to acquire Renaissance Learning for $1.1 billion in a deal that will be one of the largest acquisitions ever in educational technology.




ar

As Ed-Tech Competition Ratchets Up, Blackboard CEO to Step Down

The resignation is the latest change for the educational software giant, which is facing increasing competition in selling learning-management systems to schools and colleges.




ar

Using Amazon Echo, Google Home to Learn: Skill of the Future or Bad Idea?

The growing popularity of voice-activated technologies is forcing educators to think about the role such tools play in preparing students for the jobs of the future.




ar

Cult Scottish films: From comedies to crime capers, 1970s sci-fi noir and dark family dramas

IT’S all too easy to lose track of many of the quirky, moving, interesting films that have been shot in Scotland over the years. Some of the sparkling gems on these pages attracted decent reviews upon release before fading from view; others slipped under most people’s radar. The 10 films here are funny, or dark, or insightful. All have something to say; all are worth tracking down, and watching, whether it’s for the first time, or the first time since they were released.




ar

The stuck-insider guide to a Whisky Galore tour of Barra and the isles

“THE little island of Todday is a completely isolated community,” declares the voiceover at the start of the 1949 Ealing Studios classic Whisky Galore. “100 miles from the mainland, 100 miles from the nearest cinema or dancehall. Oh, but the islanders know how to enjoy themselves. They have all that they need. But in 1943, disaster overwhelmed this little island. Not famine, nor pestilence, nor Hitler’s bombs, or the hordes of an invading army, but something far, far worse: ‘There is n




ar

Football manager Billy Reid follows Vinnie Jones, Eric Cantona and David Beckham as he stars in movie

FOOTBALLERS are performers, we all know that. But can they tackle a film script? Can they find the head space to turn out a tricky line on a crowded set? And what of football managers? Can they take to acting? We’ve long believed them to have the ego of an oligarch and to make the demands of a dictator. Does any of this suggest those born to kick balls around a park can turn their hand to thespianism?




ar

Letters: Fine margins when it comes to walkers getting better access to the fields of Scotland

IT is good to see that one of your readers, R Russell Smith, has been enjoying our wildlife and fresh air, having “walked over fields and alongside the burn close to home, enjoying the sunshine and company of lambs gambolling” (Herald letters, May 5).




ar

Letters: The ‘hurricane’ that would hit the NHS if unpaid carers opted out of their daily tasks

BEING a full-time, voluntary, unpaid carer, since November 2018, for my wife, who has dementia, I would like to ask a question of the Scottish Government, especially Jeane Freeman, the health secretary.




ar

Letters: Yet another generation sacrificed on the altar of globalisation

THE Herald has reported (May 6) on another economically and socially “lost generation” of children and young people due to Covid-19.




ar

Decrease Class Size, Increase Learning

If class sizes aren't going to be addressed because of bottom lines, either because of a lack of teacher resources or school funding, then we are going to have to find a way to function better inside of these undesirable situations.




ar

Smaller Classes Serve a Larger Purpose

Smaller classes could help bridge the gap between home and school, writes former teacher Marc Vincenti.




ar

Standards and Curricula

More than a third of the 30 biggest school districts in the United States are not using any math or English/language arts curricula that are rated highly for alignment to state standards, a new study from the Center for American Progress finds.




ar

Does America Have Education Standards?

It is time to refocus on building competency-based schools that work over time rather than forcing top-down laws that end in superficial changes in policy and no change in student outcomes, says guest blogger Van Schoales.




ar

Camley's Cartoon on Saturday, July 13: It's the Donald Trump show

Framed prints of Steven Camley's cartoons are available by calling 0141 302 6210.”




ar

Camley's Cartoon on Saturday, July 20: Pensioners' fear of banking app

Framed prints of Steven Camley's cartoons are available by calling 0141 302 6210




ar

Camley's Cartoon on Saturday, July 27: New PM's spirit of blind optimism

Framed prints of Steven Camley's cartoons are available by calling 0141 302 6210.”




ar

Camley's Cartoon on Saturday, August 10: Transport system washed out

Framed prints of Steven Camley's cartoons are available by calling 0141 302 6210




ar

Camley's Cartoon: Trump brings Hong Kong into trade war

Framed prints of Steven Camley's cartoons are available by calling 0141 302 6210.




ar

Camley’s Cartoon round-up: Royal crisis, CalMac latest, Brian Cox and more

Monday 13 January: Royals’ family meeting




ar

Camley’s Cartoon: Bernie Sanders, Luss for life, falling education standards and more

This week, our resident cartoonist turned his pen on the Coronavirus outbreak, Bernie Sanders rising popularity in the United States and the battle for an SNP seat at Holyrood.




ar

Camley’s Cartoon: Coronavirus, Cummings and Priti Patel

This week, our resident cartoonist turned his pen on the Coronavirus outbreak, bullying claims surrounding the home secretary and Scotland making in to the world list of top beaches.




ar

Camley’s Cartoon on Saturday, April 18

Framed prints of Steven Camley's cartoons are available by calling 0141 302 6210




ar

Herald Diary: A tale of two drivers

Balls up




ar

Herald Diary: Bagpipes and bad boy Ian Rankin

Batty idea




ar

Herald Diary: 'Six o’ wan and two-thirds o’ the other'

Head boy




ar

Opinion: Robert McNeil: It’s fine as far as it goes: social distancing is near to my heart

WHAT’S a little distancing between us? Go on, stick your nose closer to the page or screen. Let’s snuggle in a little closer.




ar

Herald Diary: Roddy Frame, errant golf balls and the world’s worst thesaurus

Dried up talent




ar

Herald Diary: Why you should never date a tennis player

Force or farce?




ar

Herald Diary: War and Peace? Gies us peace

Hot air




ar

Herald Diary: Elon Musk and the case of too much milk

Laughable list




ar

Different Paths to the Same Goal: College and Career Readiness

Two recent studies of Teach to One: Math highlight the tension in math between grade-level-based accountability systems and approaches to instruction that enable more personalized paths to college and career readiness.




ar

Revisiting College and Career Readiness

An EL Education school in Rochester, NY, shows that giving young children real problems to solve can instill the qualities students will need as adults.




ar

College and Career Readiness

Only 3 percent of adults think students are "very prepared" for college when they graduate from high school, according to a Gallup survey released last week.




ar

College and Career Readiness

In a new exploration of dual enrollment, the Education Commission of the States calls on states to rethink their restrictive policies.




ar

College and Career Readiness

Students from low-income families face a bumpier road than their wealthier peers, according to the National Center for Education Statistics' annual Condition of Education data compendium.