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Pupil Premium toolkit: Top 10 ways to spend the funding and make the most impact Peter Lauener Education Funding Agency 22 January 2014

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Top 10 ways to spend the funding and make the most impact

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Page 1: Pupil Premium toolkit

Pupil Premium toolkit:

Top 10 ways to spend the

funding and make the most

impact

Peter Lauener

Education Funding Agency

22 January 2014

Page 2: Pupil Premium toolkit

Areas I plan to cover today

1. The context

– The Government’s reform agenda

– Why the pupil premium is needed

2. Our policy incentives

– Funding

– Inspection

– Evidence on what works

3. Actions for school leaders and teachers to increase impact

Page 3: Pupil Premium toolkit

• We fund schools and colleges to educate

children and young people in England. To do

this we:

• fund academies directly and ensure they meet the

terms of their funding agreements

• fund local authorities to fund maintained schools

• fund sixth forms, colleges and training providers

to educate 16 to 19-year-olds, and those with

learning difficulties or disabilities to age 24 with

LDA

• provide bursaries to disadvantaged young people

• deliver building and maintenance programmes for

schools and sixth-form colleges, including project

managing new builds for schools in greatest need

EFA’s remit -

for which our funding is £54bn in

2013-14

We fund schools and colleges to educate

children and young people in England. To

do this we:

Page 4: Pupil Premium toolkit

Improving disadvantaged pupils’ life chances

is at the heart of the Government’s education

reform agenda

‘…no country that wishes to be considered

world class can afford to allow children from

poorer families to fail as a matter of course.’ Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Minister

Page 5: Pupil Premium toolkit

Poverty, equity and attainment 5

Page 6: Pupil Premium toolkit

"Our data shows it doesn't matter if you go to a school in Britain,

Finland or Japan, students from a privileged background tend to do

well everywhere. What really distinguishes education systems is their

capacity to deploy resources where they can make the most

difference. Your effect as a teacher is a lot bigger for a student who

doesn't have a privileged background than for a student who has lots

of educational resources.“

Andreas Schleicher – OECD

6

Page 7: Pupil Premium toolkit

Pupil premium: the gap

• The gap gets wider as pupils get older:

• 17.3ppt gap (63.4% achievement by PP pupils, 80.7% non-PP)

achieving level 4+ in reading, writing and maths at age 11 (2013)

• 27.2ppt gap (38.5% achievement by PP pupils, 65.7% non-PP)

achieving 5+ A*-C grades including English and maths GCSEs at age

16 (2012)

• Big variations between schools and between LAs

• KS2 reading, writing, maths gap (2013): Newham 4ppts, Rutland 35ppts

• GCSE 5 A*-C inc. English and maths gap (2012):

Kensington and Chelsea 6ppts, Wokingham 41ppts, Southend 41ppts

• Between 2008-13 the FSM gap narrowed:

• By 5.3ppts in percentage achieving level 4 or above in maths at primary

• (2008-12) By 1.6ppts in percentage achieving 5+A*-C grades inc.

English and maths GCSEs at secondary

• The highest attainment for FSM eligible pupils and smallest gaps on average

occur in schools with high rates of FSM.

• Gaps can vary widely from year to year in schools

Page 8: Pupil Premium toolkit

Incentives

Funding

School Interventions

Inspection

Pupil Premium reviews

Better information

Evidence on effectiveness

8 Our policy incentives

Page 9: Pupil Premium toolkit

Funding

9

Since April 2011, additional and rising targeted

school funding for disadvantaged pupils:

£625million in 2011-12 – £488 per pupil

£1.25billion in 2012-13 – £623 per pupil

£1.875bn in 2013-14 – £953 per primary

pupil, £900 per secondary pupil

£2.5billion in 2014-15:

– £1300 primary-aged pupils

– £935 secondary-aged pupils

– £1900 for all looked-after children,

adopted children and care leavers

Page 10: Pupil Premium toolkit

School interventions

10

Schools have the freedom to choose the interventions they consider to be most effective and cost-effective, but need to publish online:

the school’s pupil premium allocation for the current academic year

details of how you intend to spend the allocation

details of how you spent the previous academic year’s allocation

how it made a difference to the attainment of disadvantaged pupils

Identify pupils with Key to Success tool

Page 11: Pupil Premium toolkit

Inspection

11

From Sept 2013, sharper “Section 5” inspections, more focussed on attainment of disadvantaged pupils:

schools will now not normally be judged “outstanding” if – among other things – disadvantaged pupils are not making good progress

schools judged “requiring improvement” overall and on leadership where disadvantaged pupils are not making good progress are likely to have a Pupil Premium review recommended

Read the new framework document

Page 12: Pupil Premium toolkit

Pupil premium reviews

12

From Sept 2013, any school can commission a Pupil Premium review. The review:

to identify effective action for raising the attainment of disadvantaged pupils

should be led by a system leader, usually from the National College for Teaching and Leadership (NCTL), with a track record in this area

can be paid for using pupil premium funding

does not require an Ofsted recommendation – any school can commission a review

NCTL have a directory of system leaders

Page 13: Pupil Premium toolkit

Better information

13

From October 2013, better information on the achievement of disadvantaged pupils, with:

attainment data on disadvantaged pupils for schools in RaiseONLINE (Oct 2013, primary, Dec 2013, secondary)

new three-year rolling average measures in performance tables (Dec 2013, primary, Jan 2014, secondary)

enhanced similar schools tool with FSM banding information

See RaiseONLINE and performance tables

Page 14: Pupil Premium toolkit

Evidence of effectiveness

14

Since February 2012, the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) has awarded £35.9m to 68 projects, including 23 on literacy catch-up.

Most are rigorously evaluated using randomised controlled trials (RCTs)

Knowledge gained will be published on a termly basis from January 2014

EEF teaching and learning toolkit to provide accessible evidence and advice on the effectiveness of a range of approaches.

Page 15: Pupil Premium toolkit

educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/toolkit

Page 16: Pupil Premium toolkit

EEF Toolkit

16

Page 17: Pupil Premium toolkit

Feedback

Approach Average

impact Cost

Evidence

estimate Summary

Feedback 8 months ££ Very high impact for

low cost

Research suggests that providing effective feedback is challenging. To be

effective, it should be:

• About challenging tasks or goals rather than easy ones.

• Given sparingly so that it is meaningful.

• About what is right more often than about what is wrong.

• Specific, accurate and clear, e.g. not just “correct” or “incorrect”.

• Provide examples of what is correct and not just tell students when they

are wrong.

• Encouraging and supportive of further effort without threatening a

learner’s self-esteem.

Page 18: Pupil Premium toolkit

What does Ofsted say?

Ofsted’s 2013 report on the pupil premium said:

“While there are some pockets of very good practice, we find that too many

schools are still not spending the Pupil Premium on interventions that are making

any meaningful impact.”

“Many schools still lack good enough systems for tracking the spending of the

additional funding or for evaluating the effectiveness of measures they have put

in place in terms of improving outcomes. In short, they struggle to show that the

funding is making any real difference.”

“The best school leaders know what they want to achieve from each of their

interventions and they evaluate progress thoroughly to make sure these are

working. They also have well thought-through plans for building on success.”

Page 19: Pupil Premium toolkit

How are schools doing it successfully?

Ofsted’s 2013 report also sets out the characteristics of schools

that are using their Pupil Premium successfully to maximise

achievement:

• use data to analyse progress and the causes of under-achievement;

• use research evidence;

• allocate their best teachers to intervention groups;

• give systematic feedback to pupils;

• ensure class and subject teachers knew their Pupil Premium pupils

and were responsible for accelerating progress;

• monitor and evaluate impact on pupil results; and

• involve governors in planning and evaluating.

Page 20: Pupil Premium toolkit

When should we worry?

Independent 2013 evaluation report and Ofsted 2012 report identified less effective practice, including:

where school are not sufficiently clear about who their disadvantaged pupils are

where schools are not prioritising disadvantaged pupils as intended

where the choices about what interventions or training to invest in are not evidence-based

20

Page 21: Pupil Premium toolkit

Top 10 actions for school leaders and teachers (1)

1. Know where your attainment gaps are

2. Target funding at your disadvantaged pupils

- use Key to Success to identify who they are

3. Understand what evidence Ofsted is looking for on use of the

pupil premium and the progress and attainment of

disadvantaged pupils

- read the current Ofsted framework document

Page 22: Pupil Premium toolkit

Top 10 actions for school leaders and teachers (2)

4. Understand what the 2013 Ofsted pupil premium report says

about the characteristics of schools that are using the funding

effectively to maximise attainment

5. Involve your board of governors – and parents/carers – in your

decisions on how to spend the pupil premium

6. Read relevant sections of your school’s RAISEonline report;

identify schools which are similar to yours; get help from

school improvement or data provider partners

Page 23: Pupil Premium toolkit

Top 10 actions for school leaders and teachers (3)

7. Consider commissioning a pupil premium review

- you don’t need to be prompted by Ofsted to do this, and you

can pay for it using pupil premium funding

8. Engage with the evidence on “what works” in the Teaching

and Learning Toolkit – when selecting which interventions to

put in place and in planning their delivery

9. Evaluate the impact of your activities and gather evidence for

Ofsted

10. Publish your pupil premium statement online

Page 24: Pupil Premium toolkit

Today’s

conference

Get buy-

in at

school

Use

evidence

to decide

strategy

Training

in depth

Change

practice

Make an

impact

Evaluate

effective

ness

What next?

Page 25: Pupil Premium toolkit

To end on an optimistic note …