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10:27am Sunday 11th May 2008
Kingston author Jacqueline Wilson has added her name to a campaign to eradicate Sats tests.
The National Association of Head Teachers is putting pressure on the government to make this year's national curriculum tests, which start for thousands of 11-year-olds tomorrow, the last.
They say it puts children under too much pressure and schools become preoccupied with league table results.
Ms Wilson, along with children's writer Philip Pullman, author of the Dark Materials trilogy and children's laureate Michael Rosen, have welcomed the campaign.
Ms Wilson lives in Kingston and was made a Dame in January's New Year Honours List.
She told the Independent on Sunday: "Frequently I get letters from 10-and-11-year-olds who are taking Sats tests and they are saying things like, Help, what should I do?'"
Mr Pullman added: "I've long maintained that Sats and the league tables they support only distort teaching and don't produce a good and balanced education."
Two safes cemented into the floor of a Kingston lock-up and stuffed with £1.2m of cash were seized in police raids.
The lodger convicted of the killing of Baby P attended a Croydon College construction course while on bail earlier this year.
A mentally ill man on day release from Tolworth Hospital had attempted suicide just weeks before he jumped to his death from the Bentall Centre car park, an has inquest heard.
A playwrite from Tooting proved every cloud has a silver lining after turning the global financial crisis into a BBC Radio 4 play
Police have raided homes in Surbiton, Kingston and Worcester Park and seized £1m cash and kilos of drugs in connection with a multimillion pound cannabis operation.
A computer shop in Balham was caught installing illegal software onto computers for customers to buy, it was announced this week.
An entrepreneur from Claygate has made it to the finals of a national awards for her edible gifts company.
The council has been accused of “making a quick buck” from the borough’s readers after raking in more than £100,000 in library fines.
Seeing a 1940s schoolboy creeping out of your fireplace is a frightening hallucination by anybody’s standards.
Two housing benefit cheats will have to pay back more than £15,000 in fraudulent claims and carry out over 300 hours of community service after they were taken to court by the council.
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