General Secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, Pepe Di'Iasio agrees that playtime has been squeezed "by the drive to improve academic outcomes", but cautioned against an "overly prescriptive approach to play" as this may impact on other areas of the curriculum.
"This was a cold blooded public execution carried out on one of the most crime-free parts of the UK."This was like Pulp Fiction meets
Emma, who was 13 at the time, was in the Mumutaz restaurant in Kirkwall with her parents.But at 19:15 she witnessed something that left her traumatised.She recalled: "I was sitting in one of the window seats next to the door and the door opened."
Emma thought it was someone coming to collect a takeaway.She added: "They were quite well built and they sort of had a purposeful march on them.
"I could not see who it was because they had their face covered."
Emma admitted her memory of what happened next was "fragmented".Ex-Daily Record reporter Bob Dow said: "To be honest this was more than just a murder.
"This was a cold blooded public execution carried out on one of the most crime-free parts of the UK."This was like Pulp Fiction meets
Emma, who was 13 at the time, was in the Mumutaz restaurant in Kirkwall with her parents.But at 19:15 she witnessed something that left her traumatised.