Schools North East Logo

News

Two universities to receive government funding to develop a teacher ‘degree apprenticeship’

Government funding is to be given to two English universities to develop a teacher ‘degree apprenticeship’.

Leeds Trinity and the University of Hertfordshire will receive a portion of the £4.9 million funding available for the 27 projects.

In a statement released by Leeds Trinity, it announces that it expects to start the course in September 2018.

Sheffield Hallam was also listed as developing a ‘teaching’ apprenticeship and Middlesex University as creating a ‘learning and teaching’ apprenticeship.

Degree apprenticeships are structured by combining paid work with higher education, splitting the time between studying and working with an employer.

Speaking to Schools Week, Justine Greening, Secretary of State for Education said that she felt a route into teaching which did not rely on a first undergraduate degree would give “parity of esteem” to more vocational routes.

The Department of Education later clarified to the Chartered College of teaching that ‘no teacher would receive ‘qualified status’ without a degree’.

Similar News

21
Aug

Champion Boxer Sonny Hollingsworth Strikes GCSE Success

A CHAMPION boxer has found success outside the ring with his GCSE exam results.…

Read story
21
Aug

Resilience and determination define Egglescliffe School’s GCSE success

A student who had to ‘learn to live again’ after the death of her…

Read story
21
Aug

Conyers students cook up, engineer and dance their way to GCSE success

Keen cook Megan Parker will be hoping to use her culinary skills to mix…

Read story