The man charged with overseeing plans to help children catch up on missed education in England has resigned just four months into the job. Sir Kevan Collins stepped down over the government’s pledge to spend just under one-and-a-half billion pounds on its recovery plan, calling it a ‘half-hearted approach which didn’t come close to meeting the scale of the challenge’. Boris Johnson said more resources will be ‘coming through’ to support children when catch-up plans were labelled a ‘damp squib’. Head teachers were "hugely disappointed" by a £1.4bn Covid recovery package, which breaks down to £50 extra per pupil per year. A report says £13.5bn is needed for pupils to catch up. Most of the funding will be for tutoring to make up for lost learning.
Schools catch-up tsar resigns over funding
Written by David Fletcher 03 Jun 2021Additional Info
- Pray: for all children of all abilities and every age to be supported to regain the time lost by whatever is needed, regardless of cost. (Jeremiah 29:11)
- More: www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-57320450