When Mike Kent started teachicentury ago there was no national curriculum, no testing and schools were inspected, briefly, once in a blue moon. Mike has watched primary education spiral through enormous changes over the decades. Some changes have been worthwhile. Many hahe is unhappy with a new initiative, or irritated by an incomprehensible directive from the men in suits, he'll do what he does best.pen and share it with his reade whimsical way. This collection of articles frpopular weekly column in the TES covers a whole range of amusing incidents about daily life in primary school. From the fire officer who called the children's display work 'hazardous wall substances', to the class that caused the alarm to go off at Hampton Court and the burglar who stayed traanecdotes chronicle the trials and tribulations of modern primary headship.
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