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The weak predicted grade system provided a useless substitute for A Level results, meaning that the government was doomed to fail as soon as it cancelled exams. Rather than standing their ground on the imperfect solution, the government may have lost even more political support and confidence by continuing...
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Following the devastating impact wildfires had on Californa last week, with fires having burnt nearly one million acres of land, as well as the battering Louisiana took from Hurricane Laura, many are accrediting these events to global warming caused by human activity. However, are these claims true? And could...
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Life under lockdown became the norm for nearly half a year. This means that the sudden change to fast-paced university living, can seem daunting and off-putting. These natural anxieties are a completely normal feeling and adjusting back to student life need not be a struggle....
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On the 23rd August, Jacob Blake was shot in the back seven times by the police. This sparked protests across the US state of Wisconsin and further afield as people came to terms with this brutal act of violence....
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Joe Hughes The gradual return of sport across the summer has seen its stars use their platforms to protest for social and political reform in numbers like never before, but how much of an effect do they really have? Joe Hughes takes a look at campaigns both at home...
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In this article, Daisy Forster, a second year Liberal Arts student, relays her experience as a pupil within a Steiner School. The first article in the new Features series: 'Ordinary People; Extraordinary Stories', Daisy presents the many benefits of an education focused on creativity, self-expression and personal value, as...
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Elijah Trevers takes an in-depth look at Barcelona’s all too familiar decline, and prospects for their future....