Criticism that government’s tutoring programme is patchy and overlooks pandemic’s impact on resilience and social skills

When the government announced its first tranche of Covid recovery funding for schools, Anna Grice, a headteacher at Thameside primary in Abingdon, Oxfordshire, immediately knew where to go, as she had an existing relationship with an established local tutoring charity.

She was able to pick up the phone to Quest for Learning, one of the providers on the government’s approved list of catchup tutors, and re-establish their relationship after the long lockdown school closures.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Steve Barclay says he is willing to offer bigger pay rise to doctors in England

Health secretary made clear he was open to further uplift on salaries…

The LGBTQ+ community could once rely on Labour as a staunch ally. Not any more | Owen Jones

The party that abolished Thatcher’s hateful section 28 has been pulled into…

Selfies, sendoffs and star power as Jacinda Ardern has her last day in the sun

New Zealand is still deciding what her political legacy will look like,…

Driving out invasive species on islands has high success rate and big benefits – study

New research finds that eradicating non-native rats, cats, rabbits and goats is…