The Welsh Government has today announced an extra £19m
to support education and early years settings, taking spending on
learning for under 18s to over £150m since the start of the
pandemic.
The funding will be used to ensure children continue their
learning progress following disruption due to the pandemic, with
a focus on the well-being of children and staff.
£13m will be for additional support for early years learners, in
both schools and non-maintained settings. The funding will go
towards increased practitioner-to-learner ratios in schools and
educational support for non-maintained settings to help deliver
supported, active play and experiential learning.
An extra £6 million will be allocated to schools to support
teaching staff, promote wellbeing and progression and expand on
the positive changes already made to ways of working.
The Welsh Government has provided funding for an extra 1,800
full-time teaching staff through its ‘Recruit, Recover and Raise
Standards’ programme.
, the Minister
for Education and Welsh Language, said:
“The last year has brought into sharp focus just how important
our schools, settings, colleges and universities are for our
children and young people. Education practitioners have risen
heroically to meet the challenge, while learners have been
brilliant in adapting to learning in different ways.
“Having opportunities for meaningful, quality interactions is
essential for our early years learners. Today I’m announcing a
further £13million for early years settings to provide extra
support for the unique needs of our younger children.
“We must recover and reform. I am determined that the emphasis on
well-being and flexibility shown over the last year is built upon
and closely aligned with the introduction of our new curriculum.
Our education system has shown remarkable resilience and
flexibility and we must learn from that.”