-
Unrelenting focus on academic standards, with actions
to improve literacy and numeracy and support to create a
positive learning environment
-
Equal importance for technical and vocational education
with £38 million funding boost for the first T Level
providers
-
Supporting kids beyond the classroom to build character
and resilience through a new School Sports Action Plan
Speaking at Conservative Party Conference this afternoon, the
Education Secretary, will announce a series of
measures that will help to create a work class education for
every child, whatever path they take and whatever their
background.
-
· Improving
standards in English and Maths. Many of our schools
and colleges now excel in teaching maths and English. Standards
are therefore rising with more 11 year olds meeting the required
standards in reading and writing and more teenagers achieving a
standard GCSE maths pass before they leave education. However
there is more to do and so today we are naming 32 schools and 21
colleges who will receive £66 million over five years to share
their expertise. The colleges will establish Maths Centres of
Excellence that will test and share new ways to teach students
who are resitting their maths GCSE. The schools will set up
regional English Hubs to help other primary schools teach
phonics.
-
· Support
for improving behaviour in schools. Good behaviour
unlocks opportunities for pupils. It frees pupils from low-level
disruption so they can learn and frees teachers to focus on
teaching. This government has empowered schools to improve
behaviour but we want to go further. We will therefore invest £10
million to improve training on behaviour for teachers, update our
guidance on behaviour and support the best schools to share their
knowledge.
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· World
class facilities for teaching T Levels. We are
transforming technical education so that every young person has
the opportunity to get a skilled job. From 2020, students will be
able to study T Levels - a new high quality, technical
alternative to the A-level. T Levels are designed by business and
include substantial placements in industry so that young people
master the skills they need to get a great job at the
end. Today we are announcing that we will
invest £38 million in cutting edge equipment and facilities so
that these new gold standard qualifications will be taught in
world class facilities.
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· Increasing
Careers provision. We want young people to have
great careers provision so they can access opportunities,
especially those created by our reforms to technical education.
That is why we are doubling the number of trained Career Leaders
in schools to 1,300 as well as setting up 20 new networks of
schools working together with employers. This means more work
experience, more employers visiting schools, more focus on
careers in the curriculum and more young people acquiring the
skills and qualifications they need succeed.
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· More
competitive sports in school. Sport is an important
part of growing up. It gives young people the opportunity to
build the character and resilience they need to succeed as an
adult. The Education Secretary and the Sports Minister will
convene key organisations in the sports world – including the
Premier League, England Netball and the RFU – to encourage
schools to offer more competitive school sport. This will lead to
a School Sports Action Plan which will be published next year.
Education Secretary, said:
“Look at what has been achieved in education since 2010 – back in
the world top 10 for primary school reading, with reformed
curriculum and qualifications, thousands of schools given freedom
as an academy, 1.9 million more children in good or outstanding
schools.
“This is a record to be proud of, but it’s not yet enough to be
satisfied with. Our ambition is simply said but truly
stretching: a world class education for everyone, whatever path
you take, whatever your background.
“We will not rest until results in all parts of our country
are as good as they are now in the best, opportunity is equally
available to all of our society and all routes, whether academic
or technical, are of equal standing.”
ENDS
A transcript of the Education Secretary’s speech will be
circulated shortly after he comes off stage.
For further information, please contact on 07585448031
Notes to Editors
English Hubs
- · The 32
schools chosen as hubs will spread best practice and teaching
techniques, backed by £26.3 million of funding. This will include
providing school workshops for teachers and more intensive
school-to-school support.
- · The
hub schools were chosen through a competitive process - all 32
have a background of excellent phonics teaching and are
distributed to benefit the areas that need it most. Each hub will
identify specialist literacy teachers who will get additional
training to act as experts in teaching in early language and
reading from reception year to Key Stage 1. The hubs will
work with up to 170 local primary schools and will build a
network of excellent phonics teaching in every region.
- · Please
contact the DfE press office for information on the primary
schools selected as English Hubs.
Maths Centres for Excellence
- · 21 new
centres for excellence will be established in post-16
institutions across the country - with at least one in every
region of England. The programme will design new and improved
teaching approaches, develop high quality teaching resources,
build teachers’ skills, and spread best practice across the
country through maths networks.
- · This
announcement is part of the £40 million announced in the 2017
Autumn Budget to improve the quality of basic maths provision for
low attaining young people over the age of 16 over the next five
years.
- · Please
contact the DfE press office for information on the colleges
identified as Centres for Excellence in basic maths teaching.
Behaviour
- · We
will update our behaviour guidance working with the schools that
are best at managing behaviour so that our schools are great
places to learn and teach.
- · We
will reform the training that teachers receive in their first two
years to ensure that they are able to manage behaviour and thrive
in their primary task of teaching.
- · We
will invest £10 million over the next two year to enable the
schools that are excellent at managing behaviour to train other
teachers and share their expertise.
T Levels Capital
- · We are
announcing this funding now, and plan to make it available from
spring 2019, so that providers are ready to deliver in September
2020.
- · This
investment will fund the latest industry-standard equipment to
ensure that qualifications meet the needs of employers. This will
include computers and digital equipment for those studying
Digital and heavy plant and machinery for those studying
Construction.
Increased Careers Provision
- · Many
employers think young people do not have enough engagement with
employers – 37 per cent highlighted a need for greater engagement
with business and the world of work for pupils from age 11
onwards (Gatsby Foundation, Good Careers Guidance:
Reaching the Gatsby Benchmarks, 2013).
- · The
Government’s 2017 careers strategy committed £9 million of
funding to train 500 career leaders and set up 20 networks of
schools and employers working together.
- · We
will invest an additional £5 million to more than doubling the
number of trained Career Leaders in schools, as well as setting
up new networks of schools and colleges who will work together
with employers. This means more work experience, more employers
visiting schools and colleges, more talk of careers in the
curriculum and more young people acquiring the skills and
qualifications they need to succeed.
School Sports Action Plan
- · The
Education Secretary and the Sports Minister will convene key
organisations in the sports world – including the Premier League,
England Netball and the RFU – in the Autumn to encourage schools
to offer more competitive school sport.
- · The
Government will publish a School Sports Action Plan next year
which will look to increase the opportunities for competitive
sport, train more staff in delivering high quality sport, provide
opportunities for students to get involved in leading and
coaching sport and increase the profile of competitive sport
between schools.
- · We
have doubled the PE and Sports Premium to £320 million. Last year
we announced we were doubling the funding that primary schools
receive to improve the quality of their PE and sport provision
from £160 million to £320 million a year (DfE Press
Release, 24 October 2017, link).
- · Our
Childhood Obesity Plan will make sure children are healthy and
active. The Plan recommends that every primary school child
should get at least 60 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical
activity a day. At least 30 minutes should be delivered in school
through active break times, PE, extra-curricular clubs, active
lessons, or other sport and physical activity event (DHSC,
Childhood Obesity: A Plan for Action, 20 January
2017, link).