Vikki Howells: ...Her Peirianwyr Yfory EEP Robotics yn ddiweddar. Maent wedi adeiladu, rhaglennu a rheoli robotiaid Lego. Hefyd, maent wedi datblygu eu hateb eu hunain i broblem wyddonol a osodwyd gan NASA a Lego Education. Dyma weithwyr y dyfodol, gweithwyr y pedwerydd chwyldro diwydiannol, ac mae’n galonogol gweld eu bod yn datblygu’r sgiliau y bydd eu hangen arnynt, ac yn gwneud hynny yn awr. I gloi,...
Rhun ap Iorwerth: ...gennym ni ym mharodrwydd y Llywodraeth i fod yn arloesol ac yn uchelgeisiol mewn perthynas â gweddill yr argymhellion? Here we have a well-evidenced call for the establishment of a new medical education centre in Bangor. Of course there’ll be barriers, but those barriers will never be overcome as long as this Government appears unwilling to push the boundaries of the possible. We have,...
Sarah Murphy: ...a deddfwriaeth sy'n effeithio ar bobl ifanc. Ers cael fy ethol, rydw i wedi bod yn gweithio gyda chynghorau ysgol a chyngor ieuenctid Pen-y-bont ar Ogwr, yn ogystal â Pippa King o Biometrics in schools a Jen Persson o Defend Digital Me, ar y defnydd cynyddol o ddata biometreg sy'n cael ei gasglu a'i ddefnyddio mewn ysgolion. Yn 2021, cefais wybod am ysgolion lleol ym Mhen-y-bont ar Ogwr...
Mark Drakeford: ..., but with a requirement for them to come together to consider the coherence of their plans across the south-west region as a whole. For other services, mandated regional working, such as on education improvement, will be for regional joint governance committees to determine and to decide upon the most suitable collaborative footprint, within a statutory framework. There will also be scope...
Mr Simon Thomas: ...of key questions as well around the few facts and figures that are in this programme for government and what they actually mean. There’s a commitment to an investment of £100 million to drive up school standards, but it’s not clear whether this is an extra £100 million, or includes the already increasing pupil deprivation grant, and whether the cost of reducing infant class sizes,...
Mark Drakeford: ...summer was a two-footprint model. One based around city regions, covering strategic transport, land-use planning and economic development, and another aligned to health boards for services such as education improvement, social services and public protection. At this point, Dirprwy Lywydd, I have an open mind on the specifics of geography and function, but I am clear that these...
Bethan Sayed: ...time, but the impact of that is not temporary; it has an impact on a young person who has experienced that throughout their life. I think, of course, that we have to use that funding not only for education, but for the public sector more generally. If we can fund things that will assist our young children, then that’s how we should be using those funds. Gwnaeth David Melding sylwadau...
Mark Drakeford: ...is a process that I intend to pursue further as this Assembly proceeds. Dirprwy Lywydd, amendments to the budget happen in both directions. The change in arrangements for the registration of the education workforce has resulted in a transfer out of the settlement of £1 million formerly provided in respect of teacher registration fee subsidies. The bulk of changes, however, have been to...
Alun Davies: ...language belongs to us all. It is our inheritance. It is a part of us all. This is a vision where we each share our country and share our cultures together. I want all of our children to leave school confident in not only understanding the basics of the language, but also the culture that it underpins and the history that has made us the people we are today. I am determined, and this...
Bethan Sayed: ...the arts at a grass-roots and local level; a strategy for artists’ fees and terms for the visual and applied arts in Wales; developing the music industry in Wales; funding for and access to music education; bilingual support for deaf, hard of hearing and people with communication difficulties. Now, this doesn’t mean that we’ll ignore all but the most popular issue. How the public...
David Lloyd: ...haven’t been able to do that on a number of fronts. They either haven’t had the powers, the ambition, or possibly a combination of both. For a country that has led the way in healthcare, education and industry, is this really the best we can do? Ever since I was first elected to the National Assembly in 1999, the regular release of statistics on unemployment, economic inequality and...
Mark Drakeford: ...a wider range of services suitable for discharge at a regional level. In October, the balance of advice favoured mandating health board footprints for the regional delivery of purposes such as education improvement, public protection and social services. The more detailed discussion has highlighted concerns that sticking rigidly to the health board footprint for other services could...
Julie Morgan: ...yr ysgol, a gomisiynwyd gan Gymdeithas Hanes Pobl Fyddar Prydain. Enw’r llyfr yw ‘From a War-torn Town to a Country Exile—A History of the Royal Cambrian and Llandrindod Wells Residential Schools for the Deaf 1846-1973’. Mae Mr Moon yn ymgyrchydd amlwg dros hawliau pobl fyddar a dyfarnwyd yr MBE iddo am ei waith dros gydraddoldeb a gwasanaeth gwirfoddol i’r gymuned fyddar yn ne...
Carwyn Jones: ...and debate issues so that the Welsh Government is able, ultimately, to reflect a broad spread of opinion across the country. The council for economic renewal, the Valleys taskforce, the higher education Brexit working group and round tables for stakeholders on environmental and agriculture issues are all examples of how Government is stimulating debate and contributions on EU exit issues....
Baroness Mair Eluned Morgan: ...immediate price to pay. The Institute for Fiscal Studies has suggested around £30 billion could be wiped off the economy if we leave—£30 billion that currently is being spent on our health and education systems. And it won’t be the likes of Boris and Gove who’ll suffer; it’ll be the most vulnerable and the poorest in our society who will bear the brunt of these cuts. The...
David Lloyd: ...future. This centralisation isn’t just a problem facing the south west of Wales, of course; we need to see the Welsh Government developing a vision for north Wales too and investing in a medical school in Bangor and other such proposals. Given our geography in terms of the areas of excellence here, Morriston Hospital has the potential to be a regional centre of excellence, which could...
Rhun ap Iorwerth: ...and recruit 1,000 extra doctors. A 10-year plan, with marginal gains, involving a range of policies: financial incentives; making the NHS more attractive for doctors to work; investments in medical education and training, including the development of medical training in the north. In 2016, we added the training and recruitment of 5,000 nurses and midwives over a 10-year period. We know...