Education Secretary launches £24 million programme for North East
Opportunities and job prospects for young people in the North East
of England are to be addressed by a multi-million pound government
investment to boost social mobility and raise aspirations for
children, announced today (Monday 8 October) by the Education
Secretary Damian Hinds. Launching Opportunity North East, the
Education Secretary has pledged £24 million to tackle
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Opportunities and job prospects for young people in the North East of England are to be addressed by a multi-million pound government investment to boost social mobility and raise aspirations for children, announced today (Monday 8 October) by the Education Secretary Damian Hinds. Launching Opportunity North East, the Education Secretary has pledged £24 million to tackle issues holding young people from all communities back and that can risk areas feeling “left behind”. While the North East has some of the best performing primary schools in the country, secondary school performance is significantly below other regions, and fewer 18-year-olds attend the country’s top universities than those from any other part of the country. The North East also has one of the highest proportions of young people not in education, employment or training after year 11. Opportunity North East will aim to tackle these issues by:
During his visit later today, at a roundtable discussion in Gateshead, Mr Hinds is also expected to challenge education experts, head teachers, business leaders and university leaders by asking each group what more they can do to “raise aspirations among all working class communities, including white British disadvantaged children”. He will cite research by the Institute for Fiscal Studies, which found white British disadvantaged boys are the least likely of any ethnic group to progress to university. It found groups with the next lowest progression rates – disadvantaged black Caribbean males and males from a mixed ethnic background – are around twice as likely to progress to higher education compared with their white British disadvantaged peers. Addressing the roundtable at Cardinal Hume Secondary School in Gateshead, Mr Hinds will say:
Today’s announcement is part of a government drive to improve education and boost productivity in the North of England, and follows on from investment in the Northern Powerhouse strategy. The programmes delivered through Opportunity North East build on the Government’s efforts to create more good school places in the areas that need them most through the free schools programme. Opportunity North East will tackle issues that are specific to the North East, which had the lowest percentage of young people going to top universities in 2017. It will:
The Government will also ensure that the North East benefits from other programmes including: a new investment to spread good practice in behaviour management; through the National Citizen Service programme to build character and resilience in young people; greater recognition of young people’s achievements through the Lord Glenamara Memorial Prize; and improved Careers and Enterprise education. Projects funded through the Opportunity North East programme will be in place in 2019 and will look to build on the work already underway in the region. Education, business and council leaders in the North East, among others, will form an executive board to drive the project forward and raise education standards – reporting directly to Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for the School System Lord Agnew. The board will be appointed shortly, following the roundtable hosted by the Education Secretary. Edward Twiddy, Chief Innovation Officer at Durham-based Atom bank said:
Nick Hurn, head teacher at Cardinal Hume Secondary School, Gateshead, said:
Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen said:
Andrew Hodgson, Chair, North East Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) said:
By challenging universities, local schools and colleges, and innovative local businesses in the North East to work together, the Government will create a network that will raise standards, encourage pupils to aim high when applying to higher or further education, and support schools and colleges to deliver new T Level qualifications from 2020. A challenge will also be made to employers, and especially top universities outside the region, to ensure they make the most of North East talent. The announcement of more support to recruit and retain talented teachers comes after the Government launched a free website for schools to advertise vacancies – which currently costs schools up to £75 million a year – with schools in the North East and Cambridgeshire given access to the site ahead of a nationwide launch. The Education Secretary will also visit Durham University to hear more about its proposals to open the North East’s first maths schools to offer specialist teaching for talented A Level students – following in the footsteps of successful schools opened by King’s College London and the University of Exeter. |