Latest Stories...
Norfolk County Council's Adult Education Service is launching a new course which aims to help candidates to get the equivalent of five GCSEs in just one year.
From being a secretary whose typing skills were not the quickest to becoming a law firm's first female partner in just six years is the impressive record of a Norwich-based solicitor.
Have baby will travel, or work, or study or inspire? Whatever you decide to do, if you are young and pregnant, or young and with little ones of your own, there is plenty of help and support out there.
Young film-makers from Norfolk have experienced a dream study trip touring studios in the heart of the world's film-making industry in Los Angeles.
The government this week launched a £5.5 million programme to revise the “lost” subject of dance in schools in a bid to develop a new generation of Billy Elliots.
The government this week launched a £5.5 million programme to revise the “lost” subject of dance in schools in a bid to develop a new generation of Billy Elliots.
Youngsters on the east coast looking to build a career in the construction industry are being offered the chance to meet some of the region's top industry players face to face and impress them with their skills.
Norwich School of Art and Design will begin awarding its own degrees for the first time in its 165-year history after being granted university college status.
Don’t laugh ... even academia is serious about government-backed plans for private firms to offer courses leading to national diplomas.
Two Norwich women have become the first Rosedale Funeral Training students to pass professional exams.
Another year, another overhaul of England's primary school curriculum. After well over a century of public education, one might have expected governments to have got it right.
Norfolk education chiefs are being urged to search for new answers as the county failed to improve on last year's lacklustre showing in the primary school league tables.
Financial Telemarketing Services (FTS+) is set to create more jobs on the east coast.
|