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Meningitis Outbreak Linked to Berkshire Schools After Student Death
Urgent
Health·5/15/2026AI summary

Meningitis Outbreak Linked to Berkshire Schools After Student Death

A meningitis outbreak has been linked to two Berkshire schools following the death of a student at Henley College. The UK Health Security Agency confirmed the news, stating that students from Reading Blue Coat School and Highdown Secondary School are undergoing treatment. Health officials are working with schools to provide advice and precautionary treatment to close contacts, emphasizing that the risk to the wider public remains low.

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TOI World
VR Headsets Help Pupils Manage Stress and Anxiety in London Schools Pilot
Developing
Education·5/4/2026AI summary

VR Headsets Help Pupils Manage Stress and Anxiety in London Schools Pilot

All 15 secondary schools in Sutton, London are piloting VR headsets from tech firm Phase Space in partnership with the local NHS mental health trust. The seven-minute VR programme helps pupils manage stress from exams, ADHD, anxiety, and difficult home lives. Nine out of ten pupils who used the headsets saw an immediate drop in stress, with improvements also seen in attendance and behaviour.

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Guardian UK
Hong Kong eases enrolment rules for merged schools amid declining student numbers
NEWS
4/30/2026

Hong Kong eases enrolment rules for merged schools amid declining student numbers

Hong Kong’s education authorities will relax rules for under-enrolled public secondary schools that merge with others in a bid to encourage consolidation amid declining student numbers. In a circular sent to all public secondary schools on Wednesday, the Education Bureau said merged schools would be exempt from submitting survival plans in the first three years after merging, even if they fail to admit 30 students or form two Form One classes. The bureau said the move aimed to “further support...

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SCMP Economy
Ability grouping benefits high-achievers without harming lower attainers, major study finds
NEWS
4/28/2026AI summary

Ability grouping benefits high-achievers without harming lower attainers, major study finds

A major study by UCL's Institute of Education finds that teaching pupils in classes grouped by ability improves progress for high-achievers in maths while having no significant negative impact on lower-attaining or disadvantaged pupils. Research involving 97 English secondary schools shows high-fliers in mixed-ability classes make two months less progress than those in set classes, with minimal difference for low-attainers. The findings challenge previous claims that ability grouping harms confidence of students outside top sets.

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Guardian UK