Hundreds of thousands of pupils benefit from tutoring - The Worcester Observer

Hundreds of thousands of pupils benefit from tutoring

Worcester Editorial 11th Jan, 2022   0

New figures show thousands of children across the region have benefited from catch up tutoring in the first term of the academic year.

Over 300,000 tutoring courses across the country began last term, nearing the total figure for the previous academic year, keeping the National Tutoring Programme on track to deliver the ambitious target of two million courses this academic year.

Of the 302,000 courses which began last term, an estimated 230,000 were provided through the new, school-led tutoring pillar, showing that the introduction of greater flexibility for schools in providing tutoring is proving powerful in making sure the programme is reaching as many young people as possible.

Schools Minister and Worcester MP Robin Walker said:

We are now seeing the real reach and impact of the unprecedented investment this government is making in supporting children’s education recovery. Every pupil – wherever they live – should be supported to get back on track and reach their potential, and that’s what this tutoring programme is doing.

We know there is still work to do, but it’s hugely encouraging to see so many students from all backgrounds have been directly reached through the government’s tutoring programme, and I encourage all schools to take advantage of it.




The government’s education recovery plan includes investment of almost £5 billion, including £1.5 billion for tutoring.

But the best way for young people to catch up on any missed learning is to make sure they are in school, learning face to face and last week saw millions of children across the country return to classrooms to be with teachers and friends.


A further 52,000 courses began through Tuition Partners and an estimated 20,000 pupils have started packages through the Academic Mentor pillar of the programme. The government says it is working closely with Randstad and the sector to make sure these numbers continue to rise and tutoring continues to reach the students who need it.

As schools manage the higher than expected absence among staff and pupils, the Government say the National Tutoring Programme will continue to offer access to tutoring through all three strands for the remainder of this academic year to ensure schools have greatest possible flexibility in offering pupils the support they need, including access to online tutoring.

The Department has also today published research conducted with primary and secondary schools to understand how schools have responded to the impacts of the pandemic.

According to the research, schools faced complex challenges in the autumn 2020 term, relating to pupils’ academic progress, wellbeing, and behaviour, as well as managing ongoing to Covid-19 restrictions. Schools responded to these by employing varying strategies targeting specific groups, such as those who had fallen behind in their learning, disadvantaged pupils, pupils with SEND, or transition year groups.

Evidence suggests that small group tuition can boost progress by an average of two months in secondary schools and four months in primary schools. By providing high-quality tuition to pupils through the NTP, the Government say they want to extend this catch-up opportunity to pupils whose education has been impacted the most by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Government say the £5 billion investment in education recovery is in addition to the significant increases in core schools funding being delivered over the next three years, including a boost of £4 billion – or five per cent per pupil in real terms – next year alone.

To find out more about the National Tutoring Program click here.

 

Source: Robin Walker MP and Department of Education

Online Editions

Catch up on your local news by reading our e-editions on the Worcester Observer.

Subscribe

Receive a weekly update to your inbox by signing up to our weekly newsletter.

Advertising

Advertise with the Worcester Observer to reach your audience

Buy Photos

Buy photos online from the Worcester Observer newspaper.