School leaders and business executives have been named among the
group tasked with raising aspirations and creating more
opportunities for young people in the North East of England. The
expert board will help to run the Opportunity North East programme,
a £24million initiative launched earlier this year by Education
Secretary Damian Hinds to build a coalition of schools, colleges,
local authorities, businesses and higher...Request free trial
School leaders and business executives have been named
among the group tasked with raising aspirations and
creating more opportunities for young people in the North
East of England.
The expert board will help to run the Opportunity North
East programme, a £24million initiative launched earlier
this year by Education Secretary to build a coalition of
schools, colleges, local authorities, businesses and higher
education institutions to tackle the issues holding back
young people in the region.
The group, which includes Paul Booth, Chair of the Tees
Valley Local Enterprise Partnership, Andrew Hodgson OBE,
Chair of North East Local Enterprise Partnership, Edward
Twiddy, Chief Innovations Officer and Company Secretary,
ATOM Bank and Professor Suzanne Cholerton, Pro
Vice-Chancellor, Learning and Teaching at Newcastle
University, met for the first time on the 3 December.
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State said:
Drawing on the expertise of local education and business
leaders to develop initiatives that are evidence led and
tailored to the particular needs of the North East will
help us tap into the talent that so clearly exists in the
region and ensure young people have every chance to go on
and succeed.
Creating opportunity is a job for all of us and I am
pleased to see such a diverse range of organisations
determined to work with the Government to create more
opportunities for every young person, regardless of
background.
In full, the local experts on the Opportunity North East
Strategic Board will include:
- Paul Booth OBE, Chair of Tees Valley Local Enterprise
Partnership
- Professor Suzanne Cholerton, Pro Vice-Chancellor
(Education), Newcastle University
- Professor Robert Coe, Professor of Education and
Director of the Centre for Evaluation and Monitoring,
Durham University
- Jill Colbert, Director of Children’s Services,
Sunderland City Council, and Chief Executive of Together
for Children
- Andrew Hodgson OBE, Chair of North East Local
Enterprise Partnership
- Nick Hurn OBE, Head Teacher Cardinal Hume Catholic
School, CEO of the Trinity Catholic MAT, and Chairman of
Ascent Special Schools Trust
- Cath McEvoy-Carr, Executive Director of Children and
Adult Services, Northumberland County Council
- Martyn Oliver, Chief Executive Officer and Accounting
Officer, Outwood Grange Academies Trust
-
, Director of Schools
North East
- Janet Renou, Regional Schools Commissioner for North of
England
- Sally Robinson, Director of Children’s and Joint
Commissioning Services at Hartlepool Borough Council
- Edward Twiddy, Chief Innovations Officer and Company
Secretary, ATOM Bank
- Dr Lindsey Whiterod CBE, Chief Executive of Tyne Coast
College
Opportunity North East 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. It will help young people in the North
East to reach their potential through secondary education
and beyond by:
- Building on good primary school performance to ensure
more children continue to achieve at secondary school;
- Unlocking the potential of key secondary schools in the
region by encouraging collaboration with schools, high
performing academy trusts and local authorities;
- Working with partners such as Teach First to ensure
there are more great teachers where they are needed most.
The North East will be the first region in England to
implement more support for newly-qualified teachers to
encourage them to stay in the classroom, with £12 million
for early roll-out of the Government’s improved offer from
September 2020 – and more details set to be announced in
the Department for Education’s recruitment and retention
strategy. This will form part of the Teacher Development
Premium, creating an enhanced offer of professional
development for teachers in challenging areas throughout
their careers.
- Raising aspirations and tackling the barriers that
prevent young people in the North East from realising their
full potential, including accessing high-quality technical
education and attending the best universities; and
- Making the most of young people’s skills and talents in
the North East – harnessing the pioneering work of local
enterprise partnerships – to help them find a rewarding,
secure job.
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