Teachers to strike over longer school hours

Teachers at a chain of schools are set to go on strike in protest at plans to extend the school day.
The National Education Union (NEU) said teachers at Outwood Grange Academy School in Redcar, alongside 14 other schools belonging to the trust across the country, will take industrial action.
NEU regional secretary Beth Farhat claimed teachers had been forced into this position by an employer that "simply will not listen".
Outwood Grange Academies Trust (OGAT) said it was "exceptionally disappointed" in the union's decision to strike. "We remain open to constructive dialogue," a spokesperson said.
NEU said teachers would strike on 3 June, 10-11 June and 17-19 June.
It follows OGAT's decision extend the school by 30 minutes, it said.
Ms Farhat said the changes were "deeply unpopular" and the trust's teachers already had a "huge workload" which was affecting staff retention.
"We believe that by pushing ahead with these changes and ignoring their staff, OGAT will make matters even worse," she said.
She advised the trust to "listen to their staff" and negotiate with the union for the "sake of staff and pupils".
'Workload neutral'
OGAT said it was increasing the length of the school day because it currently did not meet the government's 32.5 hour-a-week minimum expectation.
It said its school day currently ended at 14:30 BST.
"The small change we have proposed will mean students can learn more and achieve even stronger outcomes," a spokesperson said.
They said they had also made a commitment to meet regularly with trade unions to "identify any unnecessary workload" so that the new school week was "workload neutral" for teachers.
It said it was particularly disappointed that the union had chosen days when students were due to take "important exams".