Government backs young musicians
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In order to ensure all pupils are able to enjoy high-quality
lessons, schools are to receive a new model music curriculum
created by an independent panel of experts, School Standards
Minister Nick Gibb announced today. This comes as a £1.33million
funding boost is given to the Department for Education’s music
education hubs, which helped hundreds of thousands of young
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In order to ensure all pupils are able to enjoy high-quality lessons, schools are to receive a new model music curriculum created by an independent panel of experts, School Standards Minister Nick Gibb announced today. This comes as a £1.33million funding boost is given to the Department for Education’s music education hubs, which helped hundreds of thousands of young people learn to play an instrument in whole classes in 2016/17. The new curriculum will be developed by a group of teachers, education leaders and musicians and will be published in summer 2019. It will provide schools with a sequenced and structured template curriculum for Key Stages 1, 2 and 3. As well as ensuring all pupils can benefit from knowledge rich and diverse lessons, it is hoped that the curriculum will make it for easier for teachers to plan lessons and help to reduce workload. School Standards Minister Nick Gibb said:
In 2012 the government set up a network of 120 music education hubs to support the teaching of music both in and out of school. These hubs are being supported by £300million between 2016 and 2020, which forms part of an overall investment of £500million in the arts during that period, making it the second highest funded element of the curriculum behind PE. This new funding – which is on top of £300million allocated to the programme between 2016 and 2020 – will help ensure that the hubs can keep up their good work. According to a report by Arts Council England, this work has reached 89% of schools and seen over 700,000 pupils learning instruments together with their classmates in 2016/17. The music hubs support the work of primary and secondary schools, with music compulsory in the National Curriculum for children up to age 14. The new model music curriculum will provide a framework for schools to base their own programmes of study on, safe in the knowledge that it is backed by some of the most influential and expert figures in music education. The panel overseeing development of the model curriculum will be made up of:
Veronica Wadley said:
Julian Lloyd Webber said:
Linda Merrick said:
Arts Minister Michael Ellis said:
The panel will start work immediately and aims to publish the model curriculum on GOV.UK by the summer. In 2011 the Government published The Importance of Music: A National Plan for Music Education. The document set out a vision for how music education should look up to 2020 and introduced the plans for the music education hubs. With 2020 approaching, the Government has committed to refreshing the plan to ensure music, which is the second highest funded element of the curriculum behind PE, remains at the forefront of school life. |
