Rabu, 24 Februari 2021

Covid-19: 'No child's prospects should be blighted by pandemic' - BBC News

Pupils in a classroom
PA Media

No child should have their prospects "blighted by the pandemic", the education secretary has said.

Gavin Williamson was speaking at a Downing Street briefing as he set out £700m in funding to help pupils in England catch up on missed learning.

Asked about what would replace exam grades this year, he said they were "putting trust" in teachers.

It comes as the number of people to receive one dose of the vaccine in the UK surpassed 18 million.

A further 9,938 coronavirus cases were recorded across the UK on Wednesday, as well as 442 deaths within 28 days of a positive test, according to government figures. It takes the death toll by that measure to 121,747.

Labour said the government should put forward a "long-term plan... not just a quick fix over the summer".

The government has confirmed that all schools will open from 8 March, as part of the first step of a roadmap for easing England's lockdown.

As part of the latest announcements, schools will have the option to run summer classes for pupils who need it most, potentially starting with those who will be moving up to Year 7 at secondary school this year.

The government says it will be up to schools to decide how and if they run summer schools, how long they will be, and which pupils will be invited to attend.

Mr Williamson said the funding announcements were about offering "immediate" support for children and schools.

But the education secretary said many children would need longer term support, and "extensive work" was under way on plans for that.

He said: "We're going to make sure we do everything can do to make sure children reach their potential - while looking at all issues - and we're not going to be timid in aspirations for them and the actions we need to take."

The government's £700m education support package for England includes:

  • A one-off £302m "recovery premium" for state primary and secondary schools to boost summer schooling, clubs and activities
  • £200m to fund face-to-face secondary summer schools, with teachers in charge of deciding which pupils benefit
  • An expanded national tutoring programme for primary and secondary pupils and an extended tuition fund for 16 to 19-year-olds - also worth £200m
  • That includes £18m funding to support early-years language development

He also reiterated that there would be "no algorithms whatsoever" used in determining A-level, AS and GCSE grades, with marks "firmly in the hands of teachers".

It has already been announced that exams will not take place.

The minister said there would be a "clear and robust" appeals mechanism for students who are unhappy with their results.

Further details on how students in England will be graded this year will be set out on Thursday.

2px presentational grey line
Analysis box by Sean Coughlan, education correspondent

The challenge for the education secretary is to keep sounding as though he has a new plan for what everyone can see is a massive problem with no obvious easy answers.

Children have missed a huge amount of school and exams have been cancelled for two years running.

The latest announcement on catch-up has an extra £400m, but it's focused on a familiar check list - summer schools, tuition, after-school activities, much of which happens anyway and with schools deciding how it will be spent.

Gavin Williamson told Wednesday's press conference that the government was "not going to be timid", but the reports about radical plans such as longer school days and shorter holidays seem to have fizzled away.

The unshowy and highly-experienced school recovery tsar, Sir Kevan Collins, will be more interested in long-term results than show-boating headlines.

The education secretary ran through the plans for pupils going back to school - from 8 March with testing and masks - and that date offers families some certainty.

Although university students must think they are being kept in an expensive limbo, with no date yet set for when many of them can return.

2px presentational grey line

The education secretary also defended the requirement for pupils in secondary schools to wear face masks in classrooms.

He said it was a "temporary" measure that would be reviewed over the Easter break.

Asked if the government was looking at lengthening the school day in the future, Mr Williamson said it was not part of the immediate plans announced, but it could be something considered as part of a wider consultation being led by education recovery commissioner Sir Kevan Collins into the longer term support and change needed within schools following the pandemic.

This week, the government announced that secondary school and college students in England will be asked to take regular coronavirus tests at home when they return to school next month.

Deputy chief medical officer for England Jenny Harries said more testing in secondary schools would mean that parents, teachers and grandparents could be reassured that schools would be as safe as they could be.

These measures would have a positive impact on breaking the chains of transmission, she said.

But she warned that "children should not go hugging grandparents too much" before the the impact of the vaccine rollout was felt.

Rules for schools in England

Labour's shadow education secretary, Kate Green, said the impact of lost learning for children was now "baked in" and she was sceptical about whether the catch-up tutoring programme would reach many of the children who needed it most.

She also said there needed to be a "really robust moderation process to make sure that children are treated fairly... a robust appeals process" and time for schools and exam boards to assess pupils and standardise results.

In Scotland, younger primary pupils have gone back to school, along with some exam year students in secondary schools. A wider reopening has yet to be decided.

In Wales, younger primary years also returned on Monday - with older primary pupils set to go back on 15 March if Covid levels continue to fall.

In Northern Ireland, younger primary pupils will return to classrooms on 8 March.

coronavirus figures

Last year, Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced a £1bn catch-up fund for England, and later appointed Sir Kevan as education recovery commissioner.

In Scotland, the administration has promised £140m in funding to help disadvantaged pupils. Tens of millions of pounds have also been put into catch-up schemes in Wales and Northern Ireland.

The announcement comes as the Treasury has said its levelling-up fund will be extended to the whole of the UK to "help boost growth" in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

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2021-02-24 19:28:28Z
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Covid-19: 'No child's prospects should be blighted by pandemic' - BBC News

Pupils in a classroom
PA Media

No child should have their prospects "blighted by the pandemic", the education secretary has said.

Gavin Williamson was speaking at a Downing Street briefing as he set out £700m in funding to help pupils in England catch up on missed learning.

Asked about what would replace exam grades this year, he said they were "putting trust" in teachers.

It comes as the number of people to receive one dose of the vaccine in the UK surpassed 18 million.

A further 9,938 coronavirus cases were recorded across the UK on Wednesday, as well as 442 deaths within 28 days of a positive test, according to government figures. It takes the death toll by that measure to 121,747.

The government has confirmed that all schools will open from 8 March, as part of the first step of a roadmap for easing England's lockdown.

As part of the latest announcements, schools will have the option to run summer classes for pupils who need it most, potentially starting with those who will be moving up to Year 7 at secondary school this year.

The government says it will be up to schools to decide how and if they run summer schools, how long they will be, and which pupils will be invited to attend.

Mr Williamson said the funding announcements were about offering "immediate" support for children and schools.

But the education secretary said many children would need longer term support, and "extensive work" was under way on plans for that.

He said: "We're going to make sure we do everything can do to make sure children reach their potential - while looking at all issues - and we're not going to be timid in aspirations for them and the actions we need to take."

The government's £700m education support package for England includes:

  • A one-off £302m "recovery premium" for state primary and secondary schools to boost summer schooling, clubs and activities
  • £200m to fund face-to-face secondary summer schools, with teachers in charge of deciding which pupils benefit
  • An expanded national tutoring programme for primary and secondary pupils and an extended tuition fund for 16 to 19-year-olds - also worth £200m
  • That includes £18m funding to support early-years language development

He also reiterated that there would be "no algorithms whatsoever" used in determining A-level, AS and GCSE grades, with marks "firmly in the hands of teachers".

It has already been announced that exams will not take place.

Further details for for how students in England will be graded this year will be set out on Thursday.

2px presentational grey line
Analysis box by Sean Coughlan, education correspondent

The challenge for the education secretary is to keep sounding as though he has a new plan for what everyone can see is a massive problem with no obvious easy answers.

Children have missed a huge amount of school and exams have been cancelled for two years running.

The latest announcement on catch-up has an extra £400m, but it's focused on a familiar check list - summer schools, tuition, after-school activities, much of which happens anyway and with schools deciding how it will be spent.

Gavin Williamson told Wednesday's press conference that the government was "not going to be timid", but the reports about radical plans such as longer school days and shorter holidays seem to have fizzled away.

The unshowy and highly-experienced school recovery tsar, Sir Kevan Collins, will be more interested in long-term results than show-boating headlines.

The education secretary ran through the plans for pupils going back to school - from 8 March with testing and masks - and that date offers families some certainty.

Although university students must think they are being kept in an expensive limbo, with no date yet set for when many of them can return.

2px presentational grey line

The education secretary also defended the requirement for pupils in secondary schools to wear face masks in classrooms.

He said it was a "temporary" measure that would be reviewed over the Easter break.

Asked if the government was looking at lengthening the school day in the future, Mr Williamson said it was not part of the immediate plans announced, but it could be something considered as part of a wider consultation being led by education recovery commissioner Sir Kevan Collins into the longer term support and change needed within schools following the pandemic.

Deputy chief medical officer for England Jenny Harries said more testing in secondary schools would mean that parents, teachers and grandparents could be reassured that schools would be as safe as they could be.

These measures would have a positive impact on breaking the chains of transmission, she said.

But she warned that "children should not go hugging grandparents too much" before the the impact of the vaccine rollout was felt.

Rules for schools in England

Labour's shadow education secretary, Kate Green, said the government should put forward a "long-term plan... not just a quick-fix over the summer" to help children catch up with missed education during the pandemic.

She added that the impact of lost learning for children was now "baked in" and was sceptical about whether the catch-up tutoring programme would reach many of the children who needed it most.

coronavirus figures

Last year, Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced a £1bn catch-up fund for England, and later appointed Sir Kevan as education recovery commissioner.

In Scotland, the administration has promised £140m in funding to help disadvantaged pupils. Tens of millions of pounds have also been put into catch-up schemes in Wales and Northern Ireland.

The announcement comes as the Treasury has said its levelling-up fund will be extended to the whole of the UK to "help boost growth" in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

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2021-02-24 19:11:31Z
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Covid-19: 'No child's prospects should be blighted by pandemic' - BBC News

Pupils in a classroom
PA Media

No child should have their prospects "blighted" by the pandemic, the education secretary has said.

Gavin Williamson was speaking at a Downing Street briefing as he set out £700m in funding to help pupils in England catch up on missed learning.

Asked about what would replace exam grades this year, he said they were "putting trust" in teachers.

It comes as the number of people to receive one dose of the vaccine in the UK surpassed 18 million.

A further 9,938 coronavirus cases were recorded across the UK on Wednesday, as well as 442 deaths within 28 days of a positive test, according to government figures. It takes the death toll by that measure to 121,747.

Mr Williamson said the funding announcements were about offering "immediate" support for children and schools.

The government's £700m education support package for England includes:

  • A one-off £302m "recovery premium" for state primary and secondary schools to boost summer schooling, clubs and activities
  • £200m to fund face-to-face secondary summer schools, with teachers in charge of deciding which pupils benefit
  • An expanded national tutoring programme for primary and secondary pupils and an extended tuition fund for 16 to 19-year-olds - also worth £200m
  • That includes £18m funding to support early-years language development

But the education secretary said many children would need longer term support, and "extensive work" was under way on plans for that.

He said: "We're going to make sure we do everything can do to make sure children reach their potential - while looking at all issues - and we're not going to be timid in aspirations for them and the actions we need to take."

He also reiterated that there would be "no algorithms whatsoever" used in determining A-level, AS and GCSE grades, with marks "firmly in the hands of teachers".

It has already been announced that exams will not take place, but Mr Williamson said he will set out further details on Thursday for how students in England will be graded this year.

2px presentational grey line
Analysis box by Sean Coughlan, education correspondent

The challenge for the education secretary is to keep sounding as though he has a new plan for what everyone can see is a massive problem with no obvious easy answers.

Children have missed a huge amount of school and exams have been cancelled for two years running.

The latest announcement on catch-up has an extra £400m, but it's focused on a familiar check list - summer schools, tuition, after-school activities, much of which happens anyway and with schools deciding how it will be spent.

Gavin Williamson told Wednesday's press conference that the government was "not going to be timid", but the reports about radical plans such as longer school days and shorter holidays seem to have fizzled away.

The unshowy and highly-experienced school recovery tsar, Sir Kevan Collins, will be more interested in long-term results than show-boating headlines.

The education secretary ran through the plans for pupils going back to school - from 8 March with testing and masks - and that date offers families some certainty.

Although university students must think they are being kept in an expensive limbo, with no date yet set for when many of them can return.

2px presentational grey line

Asked if the government was looking at lengthening the school day in the future, Mr Williamson said it was not part of the immediate plans announced, but it could be something considered as part of a wider consultation being led by Education Recovery Commissioner Sir Kevin Collins into the longer term support and change needed within schools following the pandemic.

Deputy chief medical officer for England Jenny Harries said more testing in secondary schools would mean that parents, teachers and grandparents could be reassured that schools would be as safe as they could be.

These measures would have a positive impact on breaking the chains of transmission, she said.

But she warned that "children should not go hugging grandparents too much" before the the impact of the vaccine rollout was felt.

Impact of lost learning 'baked in'

Labour's shadow education secretary, Kate Green, said the government should put forward a "long-term plan... not just a quick-fix over the summer" to help children catch up with missed education during the pandemic.

She added that the impact of lost learning for children was now "baked in" and was sceptical about whether the catch-up tutoring programme would reach many of the children who needed it most.

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2021-02-24 18:49:48Z
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Covid-19: 'No child's prospects should be blighted by pandemic' - BBC News

Pupils in a classroom
PA Media

No child's prospects should be "blighted" by the pandemic, the education secretary has said.

Gavin Williamson was speaking at a Downing Street briefing as he set out £700m in funding to help pupils in England catch-up on missed learning.

Asked about determining exam grades in the summer, he said the government would be "putting trust" in teachers.

It comes as the number of people to receive one dose of the vaccine in the UK surpassed 18 million.

Mr Williamson said: "No child should have their prospects blighted by the pandemic and I'm determined that this is not going to happen."

The government's £700m education support package for England includes:

  • A one-off £302m "recovery premium" for state primary and secondary schools to boost summer schooling, clubs and activities
  • £200m to fund face-to-face secondary summer schools, with teachers in charge of deciding which pupils benefit
  • An expanded national tutoring programme for primary and secondary pupils and an extended tuition fund for 16 to 19-year-olds - also worth £200m
  • That includes £18m funding to support early-years language development

Mr Williamson said there would be "no algorithms whatsoever" used in determining exam grades in the summer.

But he said he could not reveal what the appeal mechanism would look like before addressing MPs.

He told a press briefing: "As I said many times before, we are putting trust in teachers.

"That's where the trust is going - there is going to be no algorithms whatsoever but there will be a very clear and robust appeals mechanism.

"But I'm afraid you're going to have to forgive me - it is right that this is announced in the House of Commons and not to yourself, so sorry about that.

"But that will be happening tomorrow, so just a few more hours to wait."

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2021-02-24 18:09:21Z
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Alex Salmond saga 'a crisis of credibility' for Holyrood - BBC News

Alex salmond
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Holyrood faces a "crisis of credibility" over its inquiry into the handling of harassment complaints against Alex Salmond, opposition leaders have claimed.

The row centres on written evidence submitted to the inquiry by Mr Salmond that was later redacted at the request of the Crown Office.

Opposition MSPs have questioned whether the move was politically motivated.

But Scotland's top law officer has insisted that it was not.

Answering an urgent question in the Scottish Parliament on Wednesday afternoon, Lord Advocate James Wolffe QC said the decision to ask for the document to be redacted had been taken independently by "senior professional prosecutors".

And he said that government ministers had not sought to direct them.

He added: "The Crown has no interest in interfering with or limiting the conduct of proceedings in this parliament.

"Its only interest is securing compliance with an order of the High Court with which we are all obliged to comply."

The law officer was responding to a question by Scottish Labour interim leader Jackie Baillie, who said it was "simply unacceptable that the Lord Advocate refused to answer the questions put to him with any detail".

She added: "The fact of the matter is that the parliament is not getting straight answers from a Lord Advocate who appears to have viewed this afternoon's session in the chamber as a necessary chore and not a chance to engage with the Scottish Parliament in a spirit of democratic accountability."

Meanwhile, Mr Salmond said in a statement that his lawyers would be writing to the Lord Advocate to ask for an explanation for the Crown Office's "unprecedented and highly irregular actions".

Mr Salmond said he had also instructed his lawyers to request specifically that the Crown "preserve and retain all material and communications with all or any third parties which led to their decision to intervene at the very last minute" before he was due to appear before the inquiry.

His submission to the inquiry accuses First Minister Nicola Sturgeon of misleading parliament, and was posted on the parliament's website on Monday.

It was published after MSPs on Holyrood's corporate body decided after taking legal advice that it was possible to do so.

But the corporate body agreed on Tuesday morning to remove and revise the document after receiving a letter from the Crown Office which expressed "grave concerns".

The Crown Office later said it had taken action because of issues of potential contempt of court.

Mr Salmond subsequently pulled out of his scheduled appearance at the inquiry, which had been due to be held on Wednesday afternoon - but is now expected to appear on Friday instead.

jackie baillie
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The inquiry has been hit by severe delays since it started its work, with opposition MSPs accusing both the Scottish government and Mr Salmond of attempting to frustrate it and avoid scrutiny.

Speaking to the BBC's Good Morning Scotland programme earlier on Wednesday, Mr Ross said "of course" parliament was facing a crisis of credibility over the inquiry.

He said: "This sleaze and scandal within the SNP has now undermined everything that's going on in Holyrood and the nationalists are clearly treating parliament and the Scottish people with contempt".

The Lord Advocate was appointed by First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and is both the head of the Crown Office and the Scottish government's chief legal advisor.

Separate documents submitted to the inquiry by Mr Salmond accuse the Crown Office of being unfit for purpose under its current leadership, and claim it is too close to both the Scottish government and the SNP.

Mr Salmond also alleged that there was "a deliberate, prolonged, malicious and concerted effort amongst a range of individuals within the Scottish government and the SNP to damage my reputation, even to the extent of having me imprisoned."

nicola sturgeon
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Mr Ross claimed that the Lord Advocate being a member of the Scottish government meant there could be a possible conflict of interest in his involvement.

Ruth Davidson, the Scottish Conservative group leader at Holyrood, later told BBC Radio 4's World at One programme that she believed there should be an independent, judge-led inquiry into "why the government is not allowing a committee of its own parliament to have access to information they need".

She added: "At the moment the government is running riot and is denying the parliament its right of scrutiny."

Ms Sturgeon, who is currently due to give evidence to the inquiry next week, has denied there was a conspiracy against Mr Salmond, saying her predecessor had made claims "without a shred of evidence".

She has also denied that she breached the ministerial code or that her government has attempted to obstruct the inquiry, and has said that she is "relishing" the prospect of giving evidence in person.

harassment committee
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Speaking at her daily coronavirus briefing, she said: "Decisions the Crown Office takes in relation to enforcing or upholding the law are taken independently of government.

"Any suggestion at all that these decisions are in any way politically influenced is downright wrong".

Ms Sturgeon also said she did not believe the redaction of the document was a good reason for Mr Salmond to refuse to appear before the inquiry.

The inquiry committee has been examining what went wrong with the government's internal investigation into sexual harassment complaints against Mr Salmond that were made by two female civil servants.

The government had to pay legal expenses of more than £500,000 to Mr Salmond after it admitted it had acted unlawfully during the investigation.

Mr Salmond was later cleared of 13 charges of sexual assault against a total of nine women after a High Court trial last year.

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2021-02-24 16:50:33Z
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