The first round of £7.7million Curriculum Fund will
provide grants to schools to help them share teaching
resources with other schools, saving teachers from
having to repeatedly create lessons plans from scratch.
It comes after research by the Department for Education
found that many teachers feel lesson planning creates
unnecessary workload and that they want easy access to
practical resources that will help them put together
innovative and effective lessons.
The initiative is the latest step by the department to
meet the Government’s manifesto commitment to provide
schools with tools that will cut unnecessary workload,
freeing them up to focus on what matters most –
teaching.
Schools Standards Minister said:
Having easy access to high quality curriculum
resources will not just save teachers time, it will
make it easier for them to deliver knowledge-rich and
engaging lessons that help young people to acquire
the knowledge and skills they need.
This fund will help great schools share resources
that they know are effective. This will help to
spread excellent teaching practices and continue the
drive to raise standards in our schools.
Since the £7.7m Curriculum Fund was first announced in
January, the Department for Education has worked with
school leaders, teachers and experts from across the
profession to understand how teachers plan lessons and
use resources such as textbooks – with research showing
that teachers feel lesson planning continues to result
in unnecessary workload. Schools can apply from today
for grant funding to share their high quality
curriculum programmes.
The Education Secretary has pledged to
champion the teaching profession and to work with
teaching unions and Ofsted to reduce workload in
schools – and in his first
keynote speech at the Association of School and College
Leaders’ (ASCL) conference in March 2018 he
set out his intention to use the Curriculum Fund to
make it easier for schools and teachers to share and
access high-quality resources.
The opening of the application window, which closes on
17 September, follows a number of recent announcements
to help schools free their staff from unnecessary and
time-consuming tasks, including: