News

TV and radio

2 August 'Rule the School' (BBC 2, 5 to 5.25pm)
2 August 'Rule the School'

(BBC 2, 5 to 5.25pm)

In this documentary series six children take on the roles of teachers and attempt to educate their elders in the finer points of teenage subculture, leading the children to implement an emergency punishment assembly.

4 August. 'Between Ourselves'

(BBC Radio 4, 11.15am to 12 noon)

Zana Muhsen and Narina Anwar tell Olivia O'Leary about their experiences of forced marriage. Zana was brought up in Birmingham by her Yemeni Muslim father and British-born white mother as a fully Westernised non-Muslim girl, but was sold into marriage in the Yemen for 1,300 by her father. Narina is from Lancashire, and was brought up in a strict Pakistani family. She was tricked into going to Pakistan, and found herself under pressure to marry. But she escaped back to England.

'The Food Programme'

. (BBC Radio 4, 12.30 to 1pm)

Berries, as well as being one of the delights of the British summer, are increasingly being recognised for the benefits they can bring to public health and the local economy. This programme explores berry culture, and looks at how Scotland is promoting berries as a means to better health with the Berry Scotland programme, which aims to implement a marketing strategy for one of Scotland's finest natural products.

6 August. 'Ritual'

(BBC Radio 4, 11 to 11.30am)

Dr Gillian Rice looks at rituals and the fine line between normal behaviour and severe illness. Up to three per cent of people are affected by an Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, and a woman tells how she became a recluse for ten years because she was scared to leave her house for fear of contamination.

'Case Notes'

(BBC Radio 4, 9 to 9.30pm)

Dr Graham Easton presents a guide to feet and how to keep them healthy.

7 August

'The Law in Question'

(BBC Radio 4, 8 to 8.45pm)

Marcel Berlins chairs a debate in which lay people tackle legal dilemmas with the help of professionals. The issues tackled include what to do with children who commit horrific crimes and whether to treat them as criminals.

'Children Behaving Badly - Mute'

(Channel 4, 8.30 to 9pm)

The second of four programmes about families coping or struggling with the extremes of behaviour displayed by their children, this week focussing on two boys diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).

How much understanding and help is society offering them and their families?

'Obsessions - Who's Normal Anyway?'

(BBC 1, 9 to 9.50pm)

One million people in Britain and six million people in America have Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. This programme looks at this debilitating illness and talks to people who have learned to cope with it.

8 August.

'The Wire - Solomon Child'

(BBC Radio 3, 9.45 to 10.30pm)

In Rwanda, a mother searches for her child as award-winning artist Josette Bushell-Mingo explores love, faith and the courage of the human spirit. The research for the play was carried out with the Medical Foundation for the Victims of Torture.

'Analysis'

(BBC Radio 4, 8.30 to 9pm)

The effects of the housing market on the economy are explored in this programme, which examines the rise in economic importance of the house and questions how much the public should worry about the current boom.

Nursery Manager

Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire

Nursery Manager

Altrincham, Greater Manchester

Deputy Nursery Manager

B92 8JE, Solihull

Early Years Educator

Southend-on-Sea, Essex