England’s £1.4bn Catch-Up Plans For Pupils In Funding Row

England’s catch-up plans worth £1.4bn for school pupils have been accused of being not as exciting or effective as expected by head teachers.

The funding will mostly be spent on tutoring sessions to make up for learning lost in the pandemic.

But the plans are much more limited than the £13.5bn which the Education Policy Institute (EPI) had calculated would be required.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said: “We will do everything we can to support children who have fallen behind.”

The catch-up plan, with £1.4bn extra over three years in addition to the £1.7bn already announced, will include £1bn for 100 million hours of tutoring and £250m for teacher training and development.

Tutoring will be targeted at those considered most in need of support, often provided in small groups, but it will not be an entitlement for all pupils.

The EPI, which warned that primary pupils had lost up to two months of learning in reading and three months in maths, said the extra funding amounted to £50 per pupil per year – a tenth of what it estimated was needed.

There had been reports the recovery plan would be much bigger and include a longer school day – but funding for any further catch-up proposals will now depend on the next spending review.

But Education Secretary Gavin Williamson told UK media that an extended school day was “very much still on the agenda”.

Asked about whether the funding was less than required, Williamson said the catch-up plan was based on the evidence of what works – and that tutoring “does actually deliver” and should not be the “preserve of a few”.

He said the £1.4bn was a “pretty hefty amount” and would “have a direct impact on children”.

The education secretary said suggestions of shorter summer holidays were no longer being considered.

Sources close to the talks said the Treasury was reluctant to sign off on such a big upfront commitment.

In response, a Whitehall source said: “Together with DfE [Department for Education] we will work out what exactly is needed in terms of extra time for children’s catch up – as well as what teachers and parents think is best and will work too.

“It’s right for both children and the taxpayer that we know what we’re buying before we spend.”

The prime minister announced the school funding as the “next step in our long-term catch up plan”.


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