Sleep experts from Universities of Birmingham, Oxford and Aberdeen are leading a study looking at teenagers sleep patterns and testing whether a later school start time could benefit them.

Parliament wants the views and experiences of children, schools and youth organisations on the impact of social media usage and screen time on young people's health

The Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) and the Kusuma Trust UK will be teaming up to provide schools with the training and support they need to improve maths and science teaching.

Premier League Primary Stars has launched a scheme offering primary schools free resources which can be used for active classroom sessions and PE lessons, such as footballs, floor spots and giant dice.

Ofsted is writing to headteachers in the North East of England after data shows the area has the highest exclusion rates in the country

Time on the curriculum for Physical Education is being squeezed, new research from the Youth Sport Trust shows.

The Prime Minister Theresa May will launch a post-18 education and funding review, and call for more parity between academic and vocational options.

Government to face second judicial review over personal pupil data collection

Campaign group Defend Digital Me has begun the legal process to challenge the Department for Education over the way it collects pupil-nationality data.

  Scottish council proposes year-round meals plan for pupils

North Lanarkshire Council has submitted proposals for children from low-income families to be provided with school meals every day of the year.

Outdated RSE curriculum is putting children at risk, survey shows

Only 10 per cent of parents in the UK are very confident that their children are getting the best RSE at school.

Government’s T-level plans are flawed, union says

Young people need high-quality vocational qualifications, but the government’s T-level plans are flawed according to the National Education Union (NEU).

 Education secretary tours the Midlands and North of England

Education secretary Damian Hinds has met teachers, children, young people, parents and social workers in the Midlands and North of England.

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