enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pupil premium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pupil_premium

    The pupil premium is a grant given by the government to schools in England to decrease the attainment gap for the most disadvantaged children, whether by income or by family upheaval. For each pupil who is eligible for free school meals , or has claimed free school meals in the last six years, their school receives £1,345 (if a primary school ...

  3. English Baccalaureate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Baccalaureate

    Pupil premium students being more likely to do EBacc subjects benefitted most. The pupil premium gap closed a little more than in schools with similar pupil intake. Pupil premium students still do not have fair access to the EBacc curriculum subjects nationally, Sutton have identified nearly an 8% gap in languages take-up or 11,000 students.

  4. List of countries by spending on education as percentage of GDP

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by...

    Education spending of countries and subnational areas by % of GDP ; Location % of GDP Year Source Marshall Islands 15.8 2019 [1] Cuba 11.5 2020 [2] Micronesia 10.5 2020 [2]

  5. National Pupil Database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Pupil_Database

    The National Pupil Database (NPD) is a database controlled by the Department for Education in England, based on multiple data collections from individuals age 2-21 in state funded education and higher education. Data are matched using pupil names, dates of birth and other personal and school characteristics, including special educational needs ...

  6. Gordon's School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon's_School

    Gordon's is now a co-educational Academy school, and the pupils are a mixture of full and weekly boarders (judged outstanding in all categories of boarding by Ofsted in 2024 [9]) and day students. The proportion of pupils with special educational needs and/or disabilities is in line with national figures, but a higher proportion of pupils than ...

  7. The E-ACT Burnham Park Academy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_E-ACT_Burnham_Park_Academy

    In 2017 Ofsted requested external review of the effectiveness of pupil premium usage. [6] Pupil numbers were low. In 2015 80 pupils applied to join the school, with this figure dropping to 55 in 2016, 21 in 2017 and increasing to 30 in 2018. [7] Pupil numbers fell to 224 as of February 2019 and the school consulted about possible closure. [8]

  8. Woolmer Hill School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woolmer_Hill_School

    The proportion of students known to be eligible for the pupil premium funding (additional government funding for children in the care of the local authority, students known to be eligible for free school meals and those from service families) stood for the financial year 2014–15 at £89,760 to supplement annual central government funding of ...

  9. Education Endowment Foundation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_Endowment_Foundation

    The Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) is a charity established in 2011 to improve the educational attainment of the poorest pupils in English schools. [1] [2] It aims to support teachers and senior leaders by providing evidence-based resources designed to improve practice and boost learning.