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The Internet Is More Fun Than Maths And English According To 77% Of British Schoolchildren
More than three quarters of schoolchildren find learning about the Internet and technology more fun than maths and English. According to research released today, nearly half of all 10 to 16 year olds believe that their school should spend more money on computers than teachers and books. Over half believe they learn more from the Internet than books. The research was conducted by MORI on behalf of Compaq and surveyed over 400 children between the ages of 10 and 16.
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Initial attitudes to the Millennium Dome
Public attitudes to the Dome immediately after its opening in January 2000
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Kids - The Growing Power Behind Technology
Children are turning technological sales, marketing and advertising on its head. Not only are the children of today more switched on to technology, such as computers, the Internet, video games, mobile phones, pagers, etc. than any other generation before - they are now influencing new technologies, and finding uses for the more outdated modes, such as pagers.
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How Blair Will Win In May 2001
There's no mystery behind Labour's poll lead, says MORI's Sir Robert Worcester -- it's the Opposition, stupid
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Public Willing to Support Cancer Charities at Christmas
People are more likely to support cancer or leukaemia research than other medical research, a MORI poll commissioned by the Institute of Cancer Research has revealed.
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Britain Today - Is Kindness In Decline?
A Reader's Digest/MORI poll reveals that around two thirds of people think Britain is a less caring place than ten years ago but the indications are that we are not so much hard-hearted as hard-headed.
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Political Attitudes in Great Britain for December 1999
Q1 How would you vote if there were a General Election tomorrow?
(If undecided or refused at Q1)
Q2 Which party are you most inclined to support?
Base: 1,967 -
UK Could Be Set To Lead The World By Becoming First Online-Society
Conference to be staged in Britain next year reveals findings of MORI survey on what over 2000 Britons think about the Internet
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250,000 Savers May Be Forced To Sell Their ISAs
Up to a quarter of a million people could be forced to close individual savings accounts (ISAs), the Government's new tax-free investment vehicle, because they have taken them out in error.