Article published on 7 July 2026
Last weekend, Kingham Lodge hosted three concerts as part of the Dean and Chadlington Music Festival. Two others took place at Chipping Norton Theatre, a third at Bruern Farm, and a gala in the theatre at Heythrop (a Warner Resort Hotel but a splendid historic site). A Desert Island Discs took place in Chadlington…
View Article
Article published on 30 June 2026
There is a particular kind of government announcement that manages to be simultaneously well-intentioned, inadequate, and infuriating. Last week’s ‘Every Child Can’ programme is a masterclass in the genre. The headline sounds impressive: £132.5 million from the Dormant Assets Scheme to enrich the lives of children through arts, sport, nature,…
View Article
Article published on 17 June 2026
We all know the saying. It took a village to raise a child — and most of us, if we are honest, have a feeling for what it meant even if we have never lived it. It meant that children were not the exclusive property of their parents, watched over…
View Article
Article published on 10 June 2026
Last week, Jack Clarke, a co-founder of Anthropic — one of the leading companies developing artificial intelligence — was interviewed on television. He was relaxed about it, which was itself slightly alarming. Primarily he was talking about the need to find a brake on how AI is developing before it…
View Article
Article published on 5 June 2026
Last night I was watching Newsnight on television and Jack Clarke, a co-founder of Anthropic, the AI company, was being interviewed. A very laid-back chap about to become a billionaire as Anthropic floats. He was very clear that the future does not lie with coders because the AI can now…
View Article
Article published on 1 June 2026
The commission led by Alan Milburn — former Health Secretary, asked by Keir Starmer to investigate why 957,000 young people aged 16 to 24 are not in education, employment or training — has now published its interim report. Its central finding is stark: a rising tide of mental ill-health, anxiety,…
View Article
Article published on 26 May 2026
For a long time the evidence has been mounting about how damaging screens are to young children. Slowly, oh so slowly, governments are mobilising to ban under sixteens from social media. They still don’t seem to have woken up to the addictive and harmful effects of gaming for under sixteens…
View Article
Article published on 26 May 2026
Something has changed in the last two years. The debate about children and smartphones (and other screens) – for a long time a battleground between concerned parents and sceptical researchers – has begun to settle. Not completely, and not without dissent. But the weight of evidence is now pointing in…
View Article
Article published on 15 May 2026
Today the Cultural Learning Alliance published its latest report card on the state of arts education in the UK. The report bends over backwards to give the government credit for saying the right things and beginning the process of reversing the decline in arts education. What it does not emphasise…
View Article
Article published on 8 May 2026
Shakespeare wrote about “the whining school-boy… creeping like snail unwillingly to school”, so reluctance to attend school is nothing new. But post-pandemic, absenteeism has soared. Of the 4.5 million children in primary schools, around 240,000 are absent every day. The most commonly cited reason for absence is anxiety and poor…
View Article