logo
Keir Starmer urged to honour pledge to embed speaking skills in England's schools

Keir Starmer urged to honour pledge to embed speaking skills in England's schools

The Guardian5 days ago
The children's writer Michael Rosen, one-time political strategist Alastair Campbell and former education secretaries Charles Clarke and Estelle Morris have urged the prime minister to honour his pre-election pledge to embed speaking skills in England's schools.
They are among 60 signatories to an open letter to Keir Starmer, calling on him to establish oracy as a core part of Labour's revised national curriculum and make it the fourth 'R' in education, alongside reading, writing and arithmetic.
Supporters were delighted when Labour announced in 2023 that teaching oracy – often defined as developing skill in using spoken language – would be a central part of Labour's educational priorities if it won the next election.
However, campaigners say it was not mentioned in the interim report of the government's curriculum and assessment review earlier this year, leading to fears oracy may have slipped down the educational agenda. The full report is due later this year.
The letter, organised by Voice 21, the UK's leading oracy education charity, said: 'Two years ago you pledged that under your Labour government, every child would be supported to develop essential oracy skills – as part of the mission to ensure all young people are prepared for work and ready for life.
'We urge you to turn that promise into lasting change. In a world shaped by rapid advances in artificial intelligence, deepening social divides and persistent inequality, the skills of speaking, listening and communication have never been more urgently needed.'
Rosen, who is a professor of children's literature at Goldsmiths, University of London, said: 'The backbone of language is our talk. It's the everyday way we make and change relationships, share the events of our lives, hear about other people's lives.
'It's where we forge our identities and culture, it's where and how we get a good deal of our understanding of what matters. We can learn and develop how to be better talkers and listeners.
'School is a perfect time for us to do that. This needs time and space and sensitive help from teachers. I hope this government backs an oracy programme in education.'
Campbell, now a mental health campaigner and author, added: 'It's time every child had the chance to develop their oracy skills – it's key not just to confidence and deeper thinking but also for countering the rise in polarisation. Labour should make sure its curriculum review has a proper commitment to oracy.'
Other signatories to the letter include author and educator Jeffrey Boakye, Nick Harrison, chief executive of the Sutton Trust, which champions social mobility, and Rupert Knight, associate professor in education at the University of Nottingham.
Kate Paradine, Voice 21's chief executive, said: 'Sir Keir Starmer has acknowledged the importance of oracy and the need to embed it in the national curriculum. We are now urging the government to deliver on its manifesto commitment so that every child can benefit from a high-quality oracy education.'
A Department for Education spokesperson said the government's plan for change would ensure every young person, irrespective of background, develops the skills needed to succeed in work and life, including in speaking and listening.
'We're already investing in evidence-based language interventions in the early years, including Nuffield Early Language Intervention, to support children's speech and language development and have strengthened our teacher training framework to place greater emphasis on high quality oral language.
'We will also consider how best to ensure pupils can communicate fluently and confidently as part of a cutting-edge curriculum, with final recommendations from the independent review due to be published in the autumn.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Keir Starmer to recall cabinet from summer break for emergency meeting on Gaza crisis
Keir Starmer to recall cabinet from summer break for emergency meeting on Gaza crisis

The Independent

time13 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Keir Starmer to recall cabinet from summer break for emergency meeting on Gaza crisis

Sir Keir Starmer will recall his cabinet from their summer break for an emergency meeting on the Gaza crisis after coming under growing pressure to recognise a Palestinian state and amid mounting concern over humanitarian conditions in the region. Ministers, who are in a summer recess until September 1, are expected to reconvene this week to discuss the situation in the Middle East. It comes after peace talks came to a standstill last week after Washington and Israel recalled negotiating teams from Qatar, with White House special envoy Steve Witkoff blaming Hamas for a 'lack of desire' to reach an agreement. Since then, Israel has promised military pauses in three populated areas of Gaza to allow designated UN convoys of aid to reach desperate Palestinians. But the UK, which is joining efforts to airdrop aid into the enclave and evacuate children in need of medical assistance, has said that access to supplies must be 'urgently' widened. Sir Keir is meeting with US president Donald Trump in Scotland on Monday and is expected to raise the prospect of reviving ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas during the talks. The prime minister will travel to Ayrshire, where the US president is staying at his Turnberry golf resort, for wide-ranging discussions on trade and the Middle East as international alarm grows over starvation in Gaza. The two leaders have built a rapport on the world stage despite their differing political backgrounds, with Mr Trump praising Sir Keir for doing a 'very good job' in office ahead of their talks on Monday. But humanitarian conditions in Gaza and uncertainty over US import taxes on key British goods in America threaten to complicate their bilateral meeting. In his talks with Mr Trump, Sir Keir will 'welcome the President's administration working with partners in Qatar and Egypt to bring about a ceasefire in Gaza', Number 10 said. 'He will discuss further with him what more can be done to secure the ceasefire urgently, bring an end to the unspeakable suffering and starvation in Gaza and free the hostages who have been held so cruelly for so long.' The leaders will also talk 'one-on-one about advancing implementation of the landmark Economic Prosperity Deal so that Brits and Americans can benefit from boosted trade links between their two countries', it said. Speaking to Sky News on Monday, business secretary Jonathan Reynolds could not say whether the RAF would be directly involved in plans to airdrop aid into Gaza but warned that the delivery of aid 'cannot wait'. 'We know the only way to get sufficient quantities of aid into Gaza is for that blockade to end, for those vehicles to get on the ground. The point about the air drops is that we cannot wait. We've got to do something. It's an unconscionable situation. 'We can all see the lapse in humanity on display, and we've got to do things to do that.' He added: 'I don't know about the operational implementation, but on the air drops, as a country, we're always standing by.'

Beijing keeps up rare earths pressure on Trump
Beijing keeps up rare earths pressure on Trump

Telegraph

time14 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Beijing keeps up rare earths pressure on Trump

China is restricting the export of critical minerals to the US as it seeks to maintain pressure on the White House ahead of trade talks this week. Despite Donald Trump striking a deal with Beijing to resume rare earths imports last month, new figures show that China has restored trade at a far slower pace than with Europe and the rest of Asia. China exported 3,188 tonnes of rare earth magnets worldwide in June, representing a 158pc jump from May. Of that total, 353 tonnes went to the US, an almost sevenfold increase from the previous month's low of 46 tonnes. But the average monthly shipment to the US in the first three months of this year was 622 tonnes, suggesting trade is barely back to half the typical level. The June tonnage was also still 52pc below the amount shipped to the US in the same month last year, representing the largest year-on-year decline of any of China's major magnet customers. Germany, the largest buyer, received 764 tonnes, up almost threefold from May and down just 25pc year-on-year. Poland, France, Hungary and South Korea also received large boosts to shipments, and had lower year-on-year declines than the US. 'While China's relationship with the US seems to be warming, Beijing will continue to keep a tight grip on critical mineral exports,' said Leah Fahy of Capital Economics. China dominates the production and processing of rare earths, and controls most of the world's supply of rare-earth magnets used in military weapons, renewable energy generation and electric vehicles. When Mr Trump threatened China with wide-ranging tariffs of up to 145pc earlier this year, Beijing responded by halting rare earths exports. This led to the President quickly caving in amid criticism from American manufacturers. He said on June 11 that he would slash tariffs to restore full access to rare earths. Meanwhile, Chinese vice-premier He Lifeng will meet US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Monday for two days of trade talks in Stockholm. Mr Bessent has described the two superpowers' trading relationship as 'in a good place', with reports emerging late on Sunday that they have agreed to extend their truce on tariffs by another 90 days. It had been expected to expire on August 12. Ahead of the talks, Mr Bessent has said he wants to address China's purchases of Russian and Iranian oil. Mr Trump has threatened 100pc tariffs on countries that buy Russian oil. If this levy were imposed on China, by far the biggest buyer, it could reignite the trans-Pacific trade war, and risk jeopardising rare-earth trade once again. Ms Lahy said China's rare-earth powers might diminish over time. 'There's only so many times China can go back and forth, using it as a way to get things out of the US, without annoying the US even more,' she said. 'And even if China starts supplying as many rare earths as it did before, the genie is out of the bottle. The West knows that China can limit its exports of these goods whenever, so they're going to look to diversify their supply chains.' Mr Bessent also wants to confront Mr He in Stockholm about what he said was 'overcapacity' at Chinese factories. The US Treasury has criticised Beijing for lavishing subsidies on its manufacturing industry. By skewing the Chinese economy towards production and exports ahead of consumption, this helps fuel China's hefty trade surplus with the US – which Mr Trump loathes. Beijing is taking steps to address this.

European stocks poised to jump after Trump trade deal
European stocks poised to jump after Trump trade deal

Telegraph

time14 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

European stocks poised to jump after Trump trade deal

Good morning European stocks looked poised to rise on Monday as a deal between the US and European Union appeared to head off the risk of a damaging transatlantic trade war. The deal struck by Donald Trump and Urusula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, on Sunday at the former's Scottish golf course will set a tariff rate of 15pc for most goods, down from a threatened 30pc. Full details are yet to be confirmed and a written next still needs to be agreed. But as traders breathed a sigh of relief, Euro Stoxx 50 futures were up 1.3pc on Monday morning ahead of markets opening. Speaking on Sunday, Mr Trump said: 'This is probably the biggest deal ever reached in any capacity, trade or beyond trade.' 5 things to start your day US cars and energy to flood Europe as Trump strikes trade deal | Eleventh-hour agreement in Scottish summit to avert 30pc tariffs Britain is stuck in a 'doom loop', warns hedge fund chief | American billionaire Ray Dalio issues a stark warning about the health of the UK economy Fintech boss accused of 'backdoor' power grab in row over US move | Former partner claims the chief executive is hijacking a crunch shareholder vote to tighten his grip Thames Water faces rocketing demand for supplies | Utility giant warns that plans to build 100 new data centres across London and the South East will pile more pressure on its creaking infrastructure. Telecoms chief lands record £131m payday | The boss of a little-known UK telecoms business was handed a record £131m last year, marking the highest-ever package paid by a London-listed business.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store