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Wednesday, July 20, 2016
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FINAL DECISION ON GATWICK RUNWAY JUST WEEKS AWAY
MELA FESTIVAL SUPERSTAR JASSI SIDHU WOWED THE CROWD
Page 4
Page age 4
WHY HADLOW COLLEGE DESPERATELY NEEDS YOUR PET DOG Page 6
40 PAGES OF THE FINEST PROPERTIES ON THE MARKET
See property section
Call for an end to ‘unfair’ INSIDE 11 plus entrance exam… FOOD BANK CRISIS
Domestic violence stretches Nourish to the limits. Page 8
Hundreds of ‘failed’ pupils taken into county grammar schools Andrew Tong
newsdesk@timesoftunbridgewells.co.uk
Minister pledges he will not turn his back on Europe or his constituents By Adam Hignett MP GREG Clark has dismissed fears from green campaigners that his new department will relegate environmental issues to an ‘afterthought’, insisting they will be central to the new government’s industrial strategy. As Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, Mr Clark’s new post at Whitehall gives him a wide remit as well as responsibility over areas of economic importance. The creation of the new department means there is no longer a minister with sole responsibility for Energy and Climate Change, which some believe will dilute its importance in government policy-making.
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A QUARTER of pupils accepted into Kent grammar schools have failed the normal 11-plus entry exam. That’s the claim of an education campaign group that is now pressing for the abolition of the Kent Test. The Kent Education Network (KEN) is opposed to the selection system because they say it creates inequality and a two-tier system in schools across the county – and especially in West Kent – which leads to them falling short of government targets. KEN has called for the county’s education
authorities to scrap the 11-plus in order to bridge this ‘unacceptable social divide’. The group was set up in January in response to plans for establishing an ‘annexe’ in Sevenoaks to the Weald of Kent Grammar School in Tonbridge. KEN spokesman James Parish said: “It is fundamentally unfair that some children who fail the test get a ‘second chance’ while others do not. “Some primary schools routinely recommend 90 per cent of their ‘failed’ pupils for a result reassessment, while others recommend no children at all. “The Head Teacher Assessment process only highlights the inadequacies of the Test itself. It costs KCC £348,000 a year to com-
mission the test, but they choose to select seven per cent of grammar school children another way.” He also claimed: “Kent has more schools failing to reach government targets than any other county.” The questioning of the selection methods comes as a response to a report by Kent County Council’s Commission for Social Mobility. KEN explained that while 28 per cent of the county’s students attend grammar schools, seven per cent of those are nominated by head teachers despite failing the exam, or by parents appealing against a result.
COOL RELIEF Lauren, Cam and Jasmine beat the heatwave
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iPads feel heat on year’s hottest day OFFICE workers and shoppers poured into Calverley Grounds yesterday, as temperatures hit a sweltering 88°F (31°C) – hotter than Beirut or Istanbul. While ice cream vendors celebrated soaring sales it was a different story for iPad users whose tablets flashed the message: ‘Need to cool down before you can use it’. The exceptionally high temperatures are not expected to continue, with a drop down to 70°F (21°C) by Thursday and a fair chance of showers on Friday. Over the last 20 years 88°F has been the highest recorded local temperature. Tunbridge Wells Post Office closed ‘due to the temperature inside the branch’.
FAMILY GPS RATED How good or not is your doctor’s surgery? Page 10
SUMMER TIMES
Your essential guide to family days out. See inside
TITANIC EXHIBITION Chilling tale of world’s most iconic ocean liner. Page 100