Background
The Pupil Premium is allocated to schools for children of statutory school age from low-income families who are known to be eligible for Free school meals (FSM) in both mainstream and non-mainstream settings : to children who have been looked after continuously for more than six months and to children whose parents are currently serving in the armed forces.
Schools are free to allocate the Pupil Premium as they see fit. However we will be held accountable for how we have used the additional funding. From September 2012 we are required to publish online information about how we have used the Premium.
Provision includes but is not limited to:
One to One Tuition
Small group intervention
Multi-skills Group Activities
PSHE workshops
Behaviour Support
Kelso's Choices
Warren Way Skills
Speech and Language support
Primary School Mental Health Worker
Support from Parent Support Advisor
Support with an Access and Attendance Officer
Through the use of these and other strategies there has been a significant improvement in the levels of attendance. Moreover, the levels of progress and attainment have improved throughout the school.
The Statutory Obligation
The following is an extract from a letter sent by the Secretary for Education, Michael Gove, in December 2011 to all the directors of al Local Authorities.
“The Pupil Premium targets additional money at pupils from the most deprived back grounds to help them achieve their full potential.
The Government has decided that eligibility for the Pupil Premium in 2012-2013 will be extended to pupils who have been eligible for Free
School Meals (FSM) at any point in the last 6 years. As a group, the children who have been eligible for FSM at any point in their lives have
consistently lower educational attainment than those who have never been eligible for FSM.”
Michael Gove
December 2011
The London Borough of Barking and Dagenham (LBBD) is the 9th most deprived Local authority within England and Wales. For this reason there are high numbers of pupils entitled to FSM within the school. Warren Junior has always identified vulnerable groups and FSM has always been both monitored and targeted for progress and high achievement. It should also be noted that children on FSM on occasions have out performed pupils without FSM eligibility at end of Key Stage 2 SATS. It is for this reason that the school has created whole school strategies to raise standards and promote progress across all vulnerable groups.
Maslow in a 1943 paper entitled “A theory of human motivation” proposed that humans are motivated when various needs are met. As a school Warren Junior has always maintained that children learn best when all pupils have met certain preconditions for learning. Maslow listed the hierarchy of needs as: psychological needs, safety needs, needs of love, needs for esteem and needs for self actualisation. As a school we believe that the Pupil Premium can be best used to ensure these needs are met thus providing a secure foundation upon which children have the best chance to learn.
On behalf of the staff, pupils and governors of Furze Infants and Warren Junior School I would like to welcome you to our federation. We are two schools working together under one Governing Body for the benefit of our pupils and the success of the community we live in.
We believe our schools gain from working collaboratively, more importantly, we strive to provide a seamless transition for our pupils between the two schools.
Mr. G. Wilder OBE
Executive Consultant
A WELCOME FROM THE EXECUTIVE CONSULTANT A Welcome from the Chair of Governors
Background
The Pupil Premium is allocated to schools for children of statutory school age from low-income families who are known to be eligible for Free school meals (FSM) in both mainstream and non-mainstream settings : to children who have been looked after continuously for more than six months and to children whose parents are currently serving in the armed forces.
Schools are free to allocate the Pupil Premium as they see fit. However we will be held accountable for how we have used the additional funding. From September 2012 we are required to publish online information about how we have used the Premium.
Provision includes but is not limited to:
One to One Tuition
Small group intervention
Multi-skills Group Activities
PSHE workshops
Behaviour Support
Kelso's Choices
Warren Way Skills
Speech and Language support
Primary School Mental Health Worker
Support from Parent Support Advisor
Support with an Access and Attendance Officer
Through the use of these and other strategies there has been a significant improvement in the levels of attendance. Moreover, the levels of progress and attainment have improved throughout the school.
The Statutory Obligation
The following is an extract from a letter sent by the Secretary for Education, Michael Gove, in December 2011 to all the directors of al Local Authorities.
“The Pupil Premium targets additional money at pupils from the most deprived back grounds to help them achieve their full potential.
The Government has decided that eligibility for the Pupil Premium in 2012-2013 will be extended to pupils who have been eligible for Free
School Meals (FSM) at any point in the last 6 years. As a group, the children who have been eligible for FSM at any point in their lives have
consistently lower educational attainment than those who have never been eligible for FSM.”
Michael Gove
December 2011
The London Borough of Barking and Dagenham (LBBD) is the 9th most deprived Local authority within England and Wales. For this reason there are high numbers of pupils entitled to FSM within the school. Warren Junior has always identified vulnerable groups and FSM has always been both monitored and targeted for progress and high achievement. It should also be noted that children on FSM on occasions have out performed pupils without FSM eligibility at end of Key Stage 2 SATS. It is for this reason that the school has created whole school strategies to raise standards and promote progress across all vulnerable groups.
Maslow in a 1943 paper entitled “A theory of human motivation” proposed that humans are motivated when various needs are met. As a school Warren Junior has always maintained that children learn best when all pupils have met certain preconditions for learning. Maslow listed the hierarchy of needs as: psychological needs, safety needs, needs of love, needs for esteem and needs for self actualisation. As a school we believe that the Pupil Premium can be best used to ensure these needs are met thus providing a secure foundation upon which children have the best chance to learn.
On behalf of the staff, pupils and governors of Furze Infants and Warren Junior School I would like to welcome you to our federation. We are two schools working together under one Governing Body for the benefit of our pupils and the success of the community we live in.
We believe our schools gain from working collaboratively, more importantly, we strive to provide a seamless transition for our pupils between the two schools.
Mr. G. Wilder OBE
Executive Consultant
A WELCOME FROM THE EXECUTIVE CONSULTANT A Welcome from the Chair of Governors