Pupil Premium
Please find information on our pupil premium below.
What is the Pupil Premium?
The Pupil Premium was introduced in April 2011 by the Government and is allocated to children from low-income families known to be eligible for free school meals and children who are looked after by the local authority. Schools are free to spend the funding as they see fit but are responsible for seeing that the funding supports families on low incomes and other target groups.
Provision
The range of provision the Governors may consider include:
• Reducing class sizes thus improving opportunities for effective Assessment for Learning (AfL) and accelerating progress.
• Providing small group work with an experienced teacher focused on overcoming gaps in learning.
• One to one support.
• Additional teaching and learning opportunities provided through learning mentors, trained Teaching Assistants (TAs) or external agencies.
All our work through the pupil premium will be aimed at accelerating progress, moving children to at least age related expectations. Initially this will be in Literacy and Numeracy.
Pupil premium resources may also be used to target able children on free school meals (FMSs) to achieve at or above the National Expectation at the end of Key Stage 2 (KS2).
Barriers To Learning
In school barriers to be addressed.
We need to:
How we measure the effect of the Pupil Premium
We track our Pupil Premium children at the end of each term using our assessment tools and report our findings to the Governing Body. These termly milestones allow intervention to be put into place if required.
Pupil Premium Strategy Statement