The promiseNew Labour promised a transformation of our schools, and "Education, education, education" gave rise to a flood of initiatives and announcements, writes Nicholas Pyke. The goal, said Tony Blair on the day he took office in 1997, "is the creation of a world-class education ...
Tony Blair said his three priorities were Education, Education, Education. Andrew Adonis played a decisive role in turning this slogan into a reform programme. This book describes his quest to transform standards and opportunities in England's schools, and his ambition to make English education trul...
[translate] aTony Blair’s famous quote ‘Education, education, education’ resulted in the opening of many new colleges for 16 to 18 year old students. 托尼・布莱尔的著名行情`教育,教育,许多新的学院开头’导致教育为16到18岁学生。 [translate] ...
in Clinton’s Democratic government in the USA, and in Denmark, Germany, and Sweden. In the 1990s, it was called the third way strategy (Giddens,1998). Even before Tony Blair’s New Labour government came to power in 1997, the previous British Prime Minister John Major said in a speech...
In this paper I review the experience of the UK education research community during the ten years since New Labour came to power in 1997. On taking office then Prime Minister Tony Blair famously declared that his top three priorities would be 'education, education, education'. This was set in...
When Tony Blair proclaimed his three priorities to be education, education, education, one might conclude that he was thinking mainly of primary%and second ary schools. The Government is able to point to a range of improved outcomes in schools, but the post-16 sector has yet to deliver ...
Education Audit Secondary Schools: Under the Spotlight: Why Labour's Pledges to Drive Up Standards Get a D for Delivery ; `Education, Education, Education' Was Tony Blair's Mantra for His Government. Richard Garner Scrutinises the Policies since 1997 and Delivers His Verdict on Them By ...
deep trouble, as we reported a couple of weeks ago. Polls, for what they're worth, show that chancellor Olaf Scholz’s ‘traffic light’ coalition of the Social Democrats, Greens and Free Democrats – is the least-popular government since surveys began in 1997....
It is tempting to view the Blairite legacy as a simple story of political hypocrisy: a government, swept to power after almost two decades of Conservative rule, promising much but reneging on those commitments and falling back on Thatcherite authoritarian popularism when the going got tough. But...