Schools North East Logo

News

Department for Education ditches Year 7 ‘catch-up training’ fund before it opens

A Government scheme, which promised schools up to £25,000 each to help improve the literacy and numeracy of Year 7 pupils, has been unceremoniously scrapped, months after bidders were supposed to hear back.

Last autumn, the Department for Education invited bids from teaching and research schools for ‘Year 7 catch-up training’. Successful bidders would use the cash to work with schools identified as needing “additional support” with struggling 11-year-olds.

Bidders were supposed to hear back from the Government about the status of their funding shortly after the assessment period, which ended on the 29th December.

But in an email to applicants, the DfE said it has now “decided not to proceed with funding for these 2017-2018 projects”, and instead encouraged schools to apply for cash from its Strategic School Improvement Fund.

Read the full article on Schools Week.

Similar News

30
Jan

Steady hands, bold futures: What the Academies Conference 2026 asked of us

30/01/26 Yesterday (29 January), at the Schools North East Academies Conference 2026, the phrase…

Read story
16
Jan

Listening to the Sector: Key themes from our School Business Management Council meeting

It’s no secret that we place real value on creating space for honest, informed…

Read story
16
Jan

A new chapter for St Joseph’s Catholic Primary School as pupils move Into state-of-the-art building

Pupils and staff at St. Joseph’s Catholic Primary School in Billingham have “turned over…

Read story