Top tips for supporting struggling readers
Hear from leading voices from across the sector about how to support KS3, EAL and SEND learners to make progress with reading.
Be it through engaging students in literature, developing early language skills or bringing creativity back into the classroom, we're 100% committed to supporting teachers and students.
Explore additional resources to support you with Literacy and English teaching and learning.
Now is a really important time to look after yourself and others.The Wellbeing Zone aims to provide a space dedicated to support all ages. Packed with resources suitable for teachers, parents and young people, you’ll be able to find resources from advice on coping with anxiety to fun activities to support wellbeing.
Access a wide variety of flexible and high-quality training courses to meet your professional development needs, at every stage of your career.
We have created an exclusive page to showcase the range of valuable resources that are available beyond Pearson. Explore some useful learning and teaching tools, and fun things to do at home.
Hear from leading voices from across the sector about how to support KS3, EAL and SEND learners to make progress with reading.
Grime is a style of British rap music that emerged from the UK Garage scene during the early 2000s. The genre is defined by complex syncopated raps over fast beats, initially made famous by a generation of East London artists such as Wiley and Dizzie Rascal, and more recently, revived by the likes of Stormzy, who became the first British black solo artist to headline Glastonbury in 2019. On paper, Grime is perhaps not the natural bedfellow of Classical music. Grime Opera strives to challenge this assumption, uniting young people from a diverse range of backgrounds in pursuit of an authentic musical experience.
Through her work with the Royal Meteorological Society, Sylvia Knight has discovered a hunger for revised climate teaching within the secondary curriculum. She introduces the key issues facing schools and students today, and turns to tech teacher Michael Noonan for his thoughts from the frontline of teaching design and technology (D&T).