Fund for bright disadvantaged pupils launched
New work to raise education standards for the country’s brightest
pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds will begin today as Education
Minister Nick Gibb invites organisations to manage new funding
designed to support their academic attainment. The £23 million
Future Talent Fund programme will test new and innovative ways of
helping the most talented disadvantaged pupils...Request free trial
New work to raise education standards for the country’s brightest pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds will begin today as Education Minister Nick Gibb invites organisations to manage new funding designed to support their academic attainment. The £23 million Future Talent Fund programme will test new and innovative ways of helping the most talented disadvantaged pupils to remain on their high performing trajectory and prevent them falling behind their more affluent peers. The new fund manager will run and evaluate a trial of projects from January 2019 which will help all schools to support their most able, disadvantaged pupils – to address the drop off in academic performance between key stage 2 and key stage 4. This will help to build on the government’s record, with 1.9 million more children now in good or outstanding schools than in 2010 and the attainment gap between disadvantaged pupils and their peers narrowing by 10% at secondary and 10.5% at primary since 2011. School Standards Minister Nick Gibb said,
Today’s announcement builds on wider efforts to support disadvantaged pupils and raise standards across the country, including:
The £23 million programme will deliver at least 30 trial projects between January 2019 and July 2020 following two bidding rounds. The scheme will champion best practice and encourage evidence-led interventions, including those that could be funded by schools using their Pupil Premium funding. In the autumn, a variety of organisations will be eligible to apply for the funding. This will include state-funded schools and multi academy trusts, charities and research organisations, independent schools and universities. Projects supported by the fund must be delivered in non-selective, state-funded secondary schools in England and will cover at least one of the following strands of work:
Academic standards are rising following the introduction of a more rigorous school curriculum and gold standard GCSEs and A levels to bring our education system level with the best in the world. Latest performance data shows:
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