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The Department for Education and Skills is a
department in the United Kingdom government created in 2001.
The Department works to the UK Secretary of State for
Education. The main remit of the Department can be summed up as
Schools and Adult Learning - but there are also sections delaing
with linked areas such as Child Welfare. For many of its
functions it is directly responsible only for England, because
Wales (and to a larger extent, Scotland) look after their own
education provisions.
DfES
civil servants work in either one of four locations:
London (Sanctuary Buildings or Caxton House, both close to
Westminster Abbey),
Sheffield (Moorfoot)
Darlington (Mowden Hall), or
Runcorn {Castle View House} - as well as in the regional
Government Offices.
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Contents
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1
History
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2
Ministers
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3
Permanent Secretary
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4
See also
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5
External links
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History
The Department of Education and Science was created in
1964 with the merger of the offices of
Minister of Education and the Minister of Science, with
Herbert Bowden (later to become Baron Aylestone) as
minister.
The Department offices in Westminster
In 1992 the responsibility for
science was transferred to the
Cabinet Office's
Office of Public Service and the
Department of Trade and Industry's
Office of Science and Technology, and the department was
renamed Department of Education.
In 1995, in the reshuffle after the
Conservative leadership election of that year, the
department merged with the
Department of Employment to become the Department for
Education and Employment (DfEE).
Most recently, after the
2001 general election, the employment functions were
transferred to a newly created
Department for Work and Pensions, with the DfEE becoming the
Department for Education and Skills (DfES).
Ministers
Ministers in the Department for Education and Skills as of
5 May 2006:
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Secretary of State for Education and Skills - The
Rt Hon.
Alan Johnson MP
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Ministers of State:
- ... for Schools -
Jim Knight MP
- ... for Lifelong Learning, Further and Higher
Education -
Bill Rammell MP
- ... for Children, Young People and Families -
Beverley Hughes MP
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Parliamentary Under-Secretaries of State
- ... for Schools -
Lord Adonis
- ... Skills and Vocational Education -
Phil Hope MP
- ... Children -
Parmjit Dhanda MP
Permanent Secretary
The permanent secretary of a UK Department is the senior
civil servant. While working under the direction of the
political ministers (almost exclusively members of the UK's
current governing political party), the SoS (and other senior
civil servansts, especially the Finance Director) has many
traditional and statutory responsibilities which are aimed at
ensuring that government departments are, as far as possible,
run in the public interest, rather than party-political ones.
Permanent Secretaries in the Department for Education and
Skills:
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David Bell: Jan 2006 - current (DfES)
- Sir
David Normington: May 2001 - Dec 2005 (Department for
Education and Employment / DfES)
- Sir
Michael Bichard: July 1995 - May 2001 (DfEE)
- Sir Timothy Patrick Lankester: Feb 1994 - July 1995
(Department for Education / DfEE)
- Sir Geoffrey Holland: Jan 1993 - Jan 1994 (DfE)
- Sir John Caines: July 1989 - Jan 1993 (Department of
Education and Science / DfE)
- Sir David Hancock: May 1983 - June 1989 (DES)
- Sir James Hamilton: May 1976 - May 1983 (DES)
- Sir William Pile: Aug 1970 - May 1976 (DES)
See also
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British Educational Communications and Technology Agency
(Becta)
External links
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Official website
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Science Learning Centres website The national network of
Science Learning Centres provides Continuing Professional
Development for everyone involved in science education. The
network is a joint initiative by the Department for
Education and Skills and the Wellcome Trust.
Categories:
Education in England |
Departments of the United Kingdom Government |
Education ministries |
United Kingdom government stubs