Shared postal mailings with free emails

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Posted on 9th February 2011 by admin in Uncategorized

The notion of combining a postal shared mailing with an email campaign (especially with the email campaign being free of charge) has caught on so well that once again we are on the edge of selling out all the spaces and are having to introduce another date.
The secondary school postal shared mailing (which comes with a free email campaign of your choice) has got a couple of free places available – and once the contracts are signed on those spaces the booking will be closed.
The next date for the mailing will be 27 April, and we are now open for bookings for a shared mailing on this date – again with a free email campaign alongside it.
Here’s the details.  First the dates, then the prices…

Shared postal mailing to secondary schools with free email campaign of your choice.

Delivery of materials by 2 March; materials despatched 9 March.

Delivery of materials by 20 April; materials despatched 27 April.

Prices: 1 leaflet, £375, 2 leaflets £472 (price per teacher 4.6p)

Weight charge: £20 per gram after the first 15g.

There’s more about postal shared mailings on www.shared.org.uk and if you want to chat about the details, or enquire about making a booking please call 01536 399 000.   To make a firm booking please email sales@hamilton-house.com with details of which date you want to be in, how many leaflets you want to include, and the weight of the leaflet/s.

Tony Attwood

Hamilton House Mailings Ltd reg number 2444392 VAT 354907535GB.  Phone 01536 399 000.

Music education gets a boost

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Posted on 7th February 2011 by admin in Uncategorized

To ensure young people from every background have access to quality music education, Michael Gove has announced that £82.5m will be given to music services across England next year.

This follows Darren Henley’s review into music education.  The money will be used to make opportunity more equal in music education and enhance the prestige and esteem of music teaching as a career route for professional musicians.

Darren Henley’s ideas, which seem to have met with the secretary of state’s approval, suggest ways of increasing access to music education, including

  • getting more top music graduates and performers into teaching through Teach First
  • producing a comprehensive national plan for music education that sets out how children of all ages and ability can receive the best possible music education
  • moving to a national funding formula for allocating funding for music.

The Government will publish a national plan for music education later this year. This will set out the Government’s commitment to give all young people the best possible music education.

It will take forward the recommendations for schools to create more opportunities for live music and for pupils to be able to join in vocal and musical ensembles outside the classroom.

Michael Gove said:

Music has the power to touch the soul. It is a universal language understood by people of every culture and it gives us all the chance to be transported by beauty.

But access to the best musical education is not universal and the opportunity to benefit from great instrumental tuition is not shared equally. Many disadvantaged children are denied the music education they deserve. And that’s why we need to bridge this musical divide.

All young people should have the chance to benefit from the opportunities that music can bring – not simply those pupils from wealthy backgrounds whose parents can afford to pay for lessons. So I am delighted to announce £82.5m funding for music education for next year – protected to ensure it goes to the front line.

We know that currently, in some areas of the country, music education is simply not up to scratch. That is why we asked Darren Henley to review the state of music provision. And he’s done a superb job, not least in showing how great musicians can help us tackle the musical divide.

Teach First already does fantastic work attracting some of this country’s most impressive graduates into teaching. So I am pleased that, in line with Darren’s recommendation, they have agreed to work with us to bring many of the exceptional musicians in our universities and conservatories into our schools.

Darren Henley, Managing Director of Classic FM, welcomed the Government’s commitment to music education. He said:

This is a real opportunity for everyone involved in working in music to help to ensure that we have a generation of children who are both musically literate and music lovers. We want to ensure that the music education that every child receives is excellent in every way. And we want to make it possible for every child to be able to progress through a music education system that enables them to achieve their full musical potential.

I hope that my review will provide a basis for the thousands of passionate and dedicated professionals who work in music education every day to work together in partnership to develop a vibrant future for music education in this country. I would like to thank the hundreds of individuals and organisations who have helped me to shape the 36 recommendations contained in my review. I’m also very grateful to Michael Gove and to Ed Vaizey for the strong commitment to music, which they have both personally shown in today’s announcement.

Darren Henley made 36 recommendations for central and local government, and for the music sector itself.

To provide certainty to music services and to demonstrate the Government’s ongoing commitment to music education, the Secretary of State has confirmed funding for music education for 2011-12 will be £82.5m – the same amount as went to local authorities in 2010-11. The Department will then work with music services throughout the next year to manage future budget pressures.

In line with Darren Henley’s recommendations, the Government will also move towards a national formula for music education funding this year but will ensure no local authority loses more than ten per cent of its central funding in this first year.

The Government intends that the majority of funding will go to frontline delivery of music education. However, knowing that schools and teachers value the resources provided by Sing Up, the Department is providing some funding for 2011-12 to enable a sustainable future for Sing Up to be developed. The Government will also commit a further year’s funding of up to £500k in total for the current In Harmony projects so the lessons from this approach to community development can be better understood. The Government also urges individuals and organisations to pledge financial support to ensure the future of In Harmony.

You can follow us on Twitter @HHMailings

Hamilton House Mailings Ltd reg number 2444392 VAT 354907535GB.  Phone 01536 399 000.

Free school proposals

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Posted on 3rd February 2011 by admin in Uncategorized

Follow us on Twitter at @HHMailings   New Schools Network – the newly set up quango handling “Free Schools”  have reviewed almost 250 proposals for schools.  35 proposals have been accepted by the DfE and are working on their business case; 8 groups have had their business case approved and are moving into the pre-opening phase and the first Free Schools will open in September of this year.

The Department for Education has now announced that February 11th will be the closing date for any 2011 proposal.

The Department is currently conducting a review in order to update the application process and are recommending that no more applications should be put in for the time being.

New Schools Network works with groups to support their case for a new school. They are saying that proposers should focus on demonstrating parental demand and building their core team.

They have now issued a Procurement Guidance web site at http://www.newschoolsnetwork.org/3-business-case/Procurement-Guidance

Tony Attwood

Hamilton House Mailings Ltd reg number 2444392 VAT 354907535GB.  Phone 01536 399 000.