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| [January 02, 2013] |
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Research and Markets: Primary school purchasing and the Pupil Premium
DUBLIN --(Business Wire)--
Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/lnxsqk/primary_school)
has announced the addition of the "Primary
school purchasing and the Pupil Premium" report to their
offering.
The pupil premium was established in April 2011 as a way of filtering
budget to schools with higher levels of disadvantaged children. It is
allocated to schools with children who are eligible for free school
meals (FSM), children who have been looked after for more than 6 months
and children whose parents are currently serving in the armed forces. In
future the fund will also be allocated to children who have registered
for free school meals in the last 6 years.
Total funding for the pupil premium is £625m in 2011-12. This is planned
to rise to £2.5 billion a year by 2014-15. This equates to £488 for each
eligible pupil (and £200 for children whose parents serve in the armed
forces). From April 2012 and for the academic year 2012-13 the funding
will increase by £112 foreach eligible child to a total of £600 per
child. The increased funding would mean that about a quarter of pupils
could qualify, up to the age of 16, which is about 1.8 million pupils.
But since its introduction, how are schools spending the money As
schools will be held accountable for how the funding is spent, how are
they tracking improvements in progress How are they reporting to
parents on its use and what influence, if any, does this give parents as
to how the money is spent This report will deal with these questions
and draw out recommendations for education service providers for
potential investment opportunities arising from the findings.
Key Questions Answered
- Who is making decisions on how the premium is spent (for example the
head teacher, SenCo, LitCo, governors) Which contacts or resources are
they using to make these decisions What have they found helpful
- To what extent is the funding being spent on SEN resources, training
resources, early intervention, school trips or other types of resources
or services
- Problems have been reported where families are failing to claim free
school meals, resulting in schools missing out on funding. How are
schools dealing with this and what measures are they taking to ensure
that they receive all the funding for which they are eligible
- Are schools better or worse off with the premium Has the pupil
premium actually meant less funding for other areas If so, which ones
- How are schools tracking progress How will they be reporting on
progress
- How are schools reporting to parents on how the money is being spent
To what extent, if any, is parental influence having an impact on how
the money is being spent
Methodology
15 in-depth interviews will be conducted with heads and SLT members
across a wide variety of state primary schools in England.
Email survey submitted by 110 head teachers and school business managers
in state primary schools in England.
For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/lnxsqk/primary_school

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