l

Serkan stunner sets up Istanbul victory

Hosts Istanbul have the early initiative in Group A after a stunning long-range strike from Serkan Uysal, a free-kick and a late penalty earned a 3-0 win against Ukraine's Ingulec.




l

Irish amateurs hold off Russia's South Region to win

Eoin Hayes's first-half strike earned the Group B points for Irish side Region 2 as Russia's South Region failed to convert their possession into a single shot on goal.




l

Flecha completes Lisboa treble to deny Ingulec

Captain Flecha completed his hat-trick in the 88th minute as – for the second time in as many Group A games – Lisboa repeatedly came from behind to draw.




l

Castilla y León thwarted by Region 2

The Spanish side had the bulk of the chances, but Eoin Hayes hit the woodwork for Gerry Davies' Irish challengers as the battle for top spot in Group B ended in stalemate.




l

Zagreb in pole position after beating Istanbul

Croatia's Zagreb head into the final group game knowing that victory will secure a place in the UEFA Regions' Cup final after they replaced Istanbul at the top of Group A.




l

South Region off the mark as Olomouc hopes end

Aleksei Lomovtsev struck nine minutes after half-time as Russia's South Region kept themselves in contention going into the last group games; Olomouc are out.




l

South Region rally to oust Castilla y León

The Spanish side let a two-goal lead slip in their last Group B game, ten-man South Region recovering to win it in added time, substitute Sergei Sokolov the match winner.




l

Region 2 reach final with Olomouc win

Eoin Hayes struck either side of half-time as Region 2 accelerated away from Olomouc, a 4-1 victory enough to take them into Sunday's UEFA Regions' Cup final as Group B winners.




l

Lisboa and Istanbul finish off with a draw

Ramazan Kallıoğlu struck deep into added time for the ten-man hosts, to hand Lisboa a third Group A draw, David Cardoso's goal not enough to earn them victory.




l

Zagreb back in final after Ingulec win

Losing finalists in 2015, Zagreb have booked their place in Sunday's UEFA Regions' Cup decider, captain Željko Štulec marshalling them to a convincing Group A victory.




l

Zagreb triumphant in Regions' Cup final

Two years on from losing the final, Zagreb have clinched the UEFA Regions' Cup crown following Toni Adžić's first-half goal in a 1-0 victory against Irish hopefuls Region 2.




l

2018/19 UEFA Regions' Cup qualifying draw

Europe's top competition for amateur players returns for 2018/19 with 39 nations discovering the fate of their eventual representatives in the preliminary and intermediate round draws.




l

UEFA Regions' Cup finals line-up set

Teams from the Czech Republic, France, Slovakia, Germany, Spain, Turkey, Poland and Russia are in the finals.




l

Regions' Cup finals draw made

The UEFA Regions' Cup finals draw was held during half-time of Bayern v Liverpool.




l

Regions' Cup 2019: all the results

All the results as Dolny Śląsk claimed the European amateur title in Bavaria after an eight-team finals.




l

Dolny Śląsk win Regions' Cup final: as it happened

Poland's Dolny Śląsk came from behind to beat hosts Bavaria 3-2 for the amateur title in a final of five penalties.




l

Dolny Śląsk win 2019 Regions' Cup: at a glance .

Dolny Śląsk beat hosts Bavaria 3-2 in a thrilling final to become only the second two-time winners.




l

Theatre review: The Metamorphosis at the Tron Theatre, Glasgow

Theatre




l

Music: Swedish Philharmonia/Martin, Usher Hall, Edinburgh, four stars

Music




l

Theatre: The Beaches of St Valery, Oran Mor, Glasgow, Four stars

Theatre




l

Janey Godley: 'Women my age are told we don’t know how to work the internet but I showed these kids how it’s done'

Brian Beacom




l

Ashley Storrie: Comedian on being enchanted by Salt Spring Island in British Columbia

ASHLEY STORRIE, COMEDIAN




l

Coronavirus: Pantos could be cancelled

THIS year, more than ever, we need to see a love story played out on stage. We need to see Covid-19 killed off as convincingly as Snow White’s wicked step ma. We need lines such as: “He’s two metres behind you!” Or the Uglies throwing scorchers at each other like: “Did you get that face mask in Poundstretchers?” “Whit? A’m no’ wearing a face mask, ya cheeky madam.”




l

Politics Watch: Cheers Minister, here’s to not panicking

A SUNDAY shift on The Herald’s Politics Watch tends to begin the same way, with an early trip to buy the papers. Usually it is just myself, a couple of other larks, and the woman who keeps an eye on the self-checkout area. All quiet on the supermarket front.




l

Alison Rowat: Not the Messiah, or even an especially naughty boy

AN item for the “there’s always one” file. Only days into the great lockdown and some people are just not coping. Take the holidaymaker – British, of course – who decided she would flout the rules and have a dip at Paradise Park in Tenerife.




l

Alison Rowat: Questions everywhere but where are answers we need?

ONE of the few benefits of living in the Unprecedented Era is having the chance to experience life at another time and in a different place.




l

Alison Rowat: A dog, a ball, and life after coronavirus

OKAY, the tale that follows is not exactly up there with the yarns spun by those Florentines fleeing the plague in The Decameron, but bear with me. It is hard to be a Ustinov-standard raconteur when that big wide world you took for granted has shrunk to the size of an egg.




l

Alison Rowat: Still time for you to do the right thing, Mr President

WHILE watching the daily Downing Street press conferences it is possible to feel a range of emotions. Frustration, for instance, as one inquiry after another goes unanswered, or disappointment at the quality of the questioning.




l

Opinion: Alison Rowat: Blistering start for Starmer at virtual Prime Minister's Questions

STRANGE things you never thought would come to pass. Queueing to enter a supermarket. Being thrilled by the sight of the bin lorry arriving. Making your own surgical mask. These days. But the oddest thing of all? Being glad to see politicians.




l

Opinion, Alison Rowat: Trust, like patience and the right gear, is running out

ONE trusts the stork’s passage across London was peaceful, its job of delivering Baby Johnson to his delighted parents made easier by the emptiness of the skies. Congratulations and welcome, young man.




l

Alison Rowat: Why scandal-hit Professor Neil Ferguson had to go

HELLO and welcome to Step on a Rake, the game show where clever people do dumb things. Previous winners of the show have included Catherine “Second Home” Calderwood, Scotland’s former chief medical officer, and Robert Jenrick, England’s well-travelled Communities Minister.




l

Ed-Tech Problems Open Doors for Entrepreneurs to Solve Them

The only way an ed-tech company can have a meaningful impact in schools is by addressing a specific problem and offering a real solution.




l

Ed-Tech Supporters Promise Innovations That Can Transform Schools. Teachers Not Seeing Impact

Fewer than one-third of America's teachers say ed-tech innovations have changed their beliefs about what school should look like, according to a new Education Week survey.




l

Harvard Business Review, MBA Lessons Guide Principals' Ed-Tech Leadership

Effective management approaches are not skills principals typically learn through the traditional pathways of education. To fill the gap, they are turning to business programs and publications.




l

What Educators Really Think

Teachers say the technology ecosystems they experience in their schools are largely characterized by incremental, rather than transformational, changes.




l

Common-Core Deal in Florida Sparks Legal Feud

The Florida Department of Education is in a bitter dispute with a software company it hired to create online resources aligned with the standards for teachers and students.




l

K-12 Marketplace Sees Major Flow of Venture Capital

Industry observers attribute the rise to heightened interest in ed-tech initiatives, decreasing technology costs, and the move to Common Core standards.




l

Ed. Startups Navigate the Hard Market Realities for Sustaining Success

Following the thrill of launching new businesses, two ed-tech startups are facing the challenges of making smart decisions to attract more customers and grow revenues.




l

One Superintendent's Approach to Pragmatic, Sustainable Tech Leadership

When it comes to school technology, Superintendent Doug Brubaker emphasizes robust infrastructure, regular refresh cycles, and training. Taxpayers and teachers are buying into the practical approach.




l

N.Y.C.-IBM Partnership Focuses on Students' Tech. Skills

The public-private initiative between the technology company and a city school aims to prepare students for future careers.




l

Flood of Investment, Products Stirs Fears of Education 'Tech Bubble'

Analysts and business officials wonder if the education technology market faces the risk of a crash, similar to what occurred during the dot-com bust in the 1990s.




l

Microsoft, Verizon, and Other Big U.S. Companies Design Their Ideal High School Courses

Education Week asked senior executives from some of the biggest and fastest-growing companies in the United States that question. You might be surprised by what they had to say.




l

Billion-Dollar Deal Heats Up Ed-Tech Market

A private equity company plans to acquire Renaissance Learning for $1.1 billion in a deal that will be one of the largest acquisitions ever in educational technology.




l

New Coalition Is Launched to Speed Tech. Innovation

A new nonprofit that will convene technology experts from across business, nonprofit, government, and education sectors will begin its big-picture problem solving in the educational arena.




l

As Ed-Tech Competition Ratchets Up, Blackboard CEO to Step Down

The resignation is the latest change for the educational software giant, which is facing increasing competition in selling learning-management systems to schools and colleges.





l

Using Amazon Echo, Google Home to Learn: Skill of the Future or Bad Idea?

The growing popularity of voice-activated technologies is forcing educators to think about the role such tools play in preparing students for the jobs of the future.




l

NewSchools Venture Fund CEO on Education Philanthropy During Coronavirus

"Folks in some foundations are quietly expressing frustration that they've been cautioned to stay in their lane and only fund things aligned with their pre-COVID strategy," says Stacey Childress.




l

K-12 Tech Leaders Prioritize Cybersecurity, But Many Underestimate Risks, Survey Says

Less than 20 percent of respondents to a new CoSN survey marked any items on a list of cybersecurity threats as "high-risk" from their perspective.




l

Film Spotlight: Misbehaviour

Keira Knightley plays a feminist activist who disrupts the Miss World contest in 1970 in the new film Misbehaviour.