Three in ten education providers in Wales are not doing well enough, but schools are improving standards, according to the Welsh education inspectorate.
The annual report from education inspectorate Estyn reveals that primary schools are doing much better than they were six years ago: 84 per cent of lessons were judged to be good or better, and the amount of good teaching has increased by 25 percentage points . Further education settings have beaten their 2007 target which called for 80 per cent of lessons to be good or better. However pupil referral units deliver a limited curriculum and some need significant improvement, with three causing particular concern.
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