Mr Balwinder Singh Kahlon, the landlord of a property on East Avenue in Southall, received a substantial fine of more than £70K at Ealing Magistrates’ Court as the result of action brought by Ealing Council.
In an economy evolving at breakneck speed, the shelf-life of a career has never been more fragile. What once felt stable and future-proof is now at risk of being swept away by an unrelenting wave of automation and artificial intelligence.
As the UK-India signed FTA last week, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer discussed the deepening of partnership between India and the UK in the education sector, perhaps one of the most exciting sectors for...
Mr Balwinder Singh Kahlon, the landlord of a property on East Avenue in Southall, received a substantial fine of more than £70K at Ealing Magistrates’ Court as the result of action brought by Ealing Council.
Nearly one in six teachers starting in England's schools last year qualified overseas, according to official figures obtained by the Times Educational Supplement (TES).
Over 500 undergraduate architecture students from 42 towns and cities in South Asia have undertaken the challenge to transform 100 public spaces as part of the University of Westminster International Design Competition inspired by the Clean...
Ethnic minorities are now "substantially" more likely to go to university than their white British peers, according to a landmark new report. The findings from the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), which described their conclusions as a "relatively...
A leading headmistress, Vivienne Durham, of Independent Francis Holland Regent's Park, stated that teachers ought to tell girls that they need to choose between motherhood and their career, rather than misleading them with the “lie” they can...
Pupils from an “Outstanding” Birmingham school will participate in a pioneering East meets West-style children’s choir, the first of its kind, ever, as part of a drive to reinforce British Values.
According to a new report, 75% of universities are breaching consumer law by not telling students what their fees buy them.

A new study has claimed that foreign students attending London Universities have given a £3 billion boost to the British economy, as well as helped support...
Many first year students have been pressurised into participating in drinking games during freshers' week. This has lead to Professor Sir Alan Fersht (72) at Cambridge University, to warn students about their future.
It is said that sex education lessons will warn teenagers about delayed parenthood and how it could make it harder for them to have children.