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Govt gives up on covid catch-up for kids and hopes you don't notice

310 replies

noblegiraffe · 12/03/2022 12:35

After the guy they specifically hired to come up with a covid catch-up plan for children resigned when the government said they weren't willing to spend the amount of money needed (£15 billion) and instead only about £3 billion, they said that the focus of the catch-up would be tutoring.

They then gave the tutoring contract to a Dutch HR firm because they bid the lowest (much better bids from experienced companies were rejected). This has turned into a slow-motion car crash where schools couldn't access tutors, websites didn't work, tutors couldn't be found.

The govt have now abandoned that and said that the tutoring money (£65 million, not billions) will be given directly to schools to source and fund their own tutors instead.

However, at the same time, targets have been dropped or watered down:

Tutors used to have to be graduates or qualified teachers. Now they merely need A-levels.

Group sizes were max 3, this is now max 6 pupils.

A requirement that 65% of targeted pupils were disadvantaged pupils has been ditched.

A thread on MN about whether children were recovering education-wise discussed how academically children seem to be ok, but socially and emotionally are still affected. (As this is MN, children of MNettters are more likely to be advantaged where the data shows that it's disadvantaged children most hit educationally, so they may have a false impression of the widespread educational impact.) However, as the sole govt focus was on educational catch-up (which has now basically fizzled out), there is no extra support for helping children emotionally or socially beyond that which schools can cobble together themselves with their limited resources. That's why the advisor resigned - he wanted a full package of support for children, physically, socially and educationally, and the lack of that is now becoming obvious.

In addition, CAMHS has basically collapsed, so there is very little professional mental health support available for children, and long, long waiting lists for those who meet the incredibly high threshold for referral.

Schools have just gone through an extremely difficult term, covid-wise. There has been massive staff and pupil absence. Far from being places of covid catch-up, many schools have struggled to staff the basic timetable, and pupils have had lack of consistency with supply staff. Exam classes have been left without specialist teaching. Despite schools now being provided with funding for tutoring, the idea that in maths we could actually find any tutors is challenging. We did have some timetabled intervention, but those teachers had to be redeployed to actual teaching because of staff absence.

Why aren't the government worried that they'll get found out?

Who is measuring the social and emotional well-being of children in a way that will actually have an impact on government policy? Parents seem remarkably reluctant to hold the government to account for their failings here.

What about exam results? Well, exam grades are decided in advance by the government. We know for a fact that pupils sitting GCSEs and A-levels this summer will come out with good results overall, because this has already been decided, regardless of their actual performance in the exams. So the public will see the exam results and figure that everything must be ok in schools because the kids are doing well in their exams. It's not ok, and don't be fooled.

This government still don't give a shit about your kids, or their education.

OP posts:
ChiswickFlo · 12/03/2022 12:56

I can only talk about the school I know about (secondary) but after a lot of work identifying those disadvantaged pupils through KPAs and HOD/HOY assessments the take up has been very poor, which I believe is a national picture?

The Y11 uptake has been better but lots of pp pupils parents/carers have withdrawn them from the programme 🤷‍♀️

Our groups are 3 max but we are continuing with sessions if 2 pupils attend (this covers paying the teacher)

It staggers me just how few parents actually give a shit tbh...MN is NOT representative of parental interest/involvement ime....

ChiswickFlo · 12/03/2022 12:57

..
Don't get me started on CPOMs safeguarding alerts...the increase in incidents has been horrific. And this is a school in a non deprived generally affluent area...

GiveMeNovocain · 12/03/2022 12:59

If anyone believed there was going to be a proper plan around catch up they were kidding themselves. Kids chances were always going to be damaged and their lives shortened by the impact of less income and being shut in with abusers.

Interested in this thread?

Then you might like threads about these subjects:

ReadyToMoveIt · 12/03/2022 13:05

I don’t think anyone expected the government to actually follow through on this, did they? I’m just so thankful schools weren’t closed to the majority of pupils for even longer than they actually were… the social and emotional impacts would have been even worse.

HesterShaw1 · 12/03/2022 13:06

If schools hadn't been shut for months unnecessarily, this thread wouldn't exist.

noblegiraffe · 12/03/2022 13:09

@HesterShaw1

If schools hadn't been shut for months unnecessarily, this thread wouldn't exist.
This is balls.

There has been a detrimental impact to education and to children by covid while schools have been open, and the idea that kids wouldn't be affected by a pandemic that has affected everything if only schools were open is extremely far-fetched.

OP posts:
noblegiraffe · 12/03/2022 13:16

Schools have been open for a year, and the conditions in them during this time (and from Sept-Dec 2020) will require catching up from, not just the issues caused by school closures (which are immense in themselves).

OP posts:
GiveMeNovocain · 12/03/2022 13:18

Children should have lived as normally as possible and then harms would be minimised to them. You got what you wanted, now live with it

megletthesecond · 12/03/2022 13:19

The rich kids will be fine. That's all the government care about.

twinkletoesimnot · 12/03/2022 13:20

It's despicable!
I agree with the PP on safeguarding too but in our area no one wants to listen!

We are in the middle of a (nother) Covid outbreak and have (on Friday) been put back into bubbles in school (which is like pissing in the wind!) and have above 20% of our school off with Covid.

Trying to catch them up is hard when children are in and out like yo-yos.
The government have never taken it seriously.

noblegiraffe · 12/03/2022 13:22

@GiveMeNovocain

Children should have lived as normally as possible and then harms would be minimised to them. You got what you wanted, now live with it
Because children aren't affected by their teachers catching covid and being off school? (This was disproved last term)

Children aren't affected by family members catching covid and getting ill, potentially dying? Rubbish.

Children don't exist in an adult-free vacuum. If adults are affected by covid, so are children.

OP posts:
Martinisarebetterdirty · 12/03/2022 13:25

Both my children are having additional support out of the Covid catch up fund, primary age, one academic and one social. We asked and the headteacher sorted it. Perhaps we are incredibly lucky but our tutors for them are experienced teachers. Maybe it’s a case of you don’t ask you don’t get. The socia support is once a week and the academic is twice a week 1 teacher to 2 pupils after school. We’re delighted with this.

C152 · 12/03/2022 13:42

I'm going to say YABU purely to expect that the Government haven't already been 'found out'. We all already know how useless and financially illiterate they are. And we know they won't invest in necessary services, but somehow always find cash to prop up a croney's / lover's business. However, you are not wrong in your sentiment of wanting better for our children.

I think schools that already had a strong academic focus and approach to helping children who were behind catch up, are managing the current situation best. I am very lucky my child is at such a school, and has benefited from the catch up classes they run before the official school day (which are taught by the very generous teachers, for no extra pay or time off). Schools who didn't already have catch up programmes or support in place for struggling pupils will be hard pressed to find the reources to do so now.

Funding on the scale necessary isn't going to appear until society as a whole changes. I don't actually know how to start such large-scale social change without it being lead from the top (i.e. Government).

noblegiraffe · 12/03/2022 13:45

Maybe it’s a case of you don’t ask you don’t get.

I asked if we could have National Tutoring Programme support for my borderline Y11s whose extra support was lost due to teacher shortages. The response was ‘that would be nice but there aren’t any tutors’. Secondary maths.

OP posts:
noblegiraffe · 12/03/2022 13:48

You got what you wanted, now live with it

How incredibly callous is this as a way to talk about the impacts of a pandemic on children?

OP posts:
MarshaBradyo · 12/03/2022 13:48

@GiveMeNovocain

Children should have lived as normally as possible and then harms would be minimised to them. You got what you wanted, now live with it
Agree and it was easy to see the harms would be great from shutting schools.
ChiswickFlo · 12/03/2022 13:49

Stem and mfl recruiting is a shit show atm

ChiswickFlo · 12/03/2022 13:50

I wish I knew how best to support the SLT

They must feel like they are 1 step forward 9 steps back

ChiswickFlo · 12/03/2022 13:53

I don't think I'll ever get over them letting primary kids back for 1 day last year before the 2nd lockdown.

I can still hear my y4 niece sobbing down the phone ☹️

DrDreReturns · 12/03/2022 13:55

It's obvious standards will be lowered instead of extra provision being paid for. It's wrong but predictable.
We've been able to pay for my year 11 son to have maths tuition as he is struggling, nothing has been suggested by the school. Obviously not every one will be able to pay, or even care.

BogRollBOGOF · 12/03/2022 14:11

Children shouldn't have been frozen out of school in summer 2020. The rates of Covid had plummeted by that point. Education should have been prioritised before pubs.
Schools should have stayed open, properly open not a two-tier system based on how deserving their parents occupation was.

Variable amounts of damage were done on the contact isolations. Some came off lightly, some came off far worse, and that uncertainty was damaging in its own right especially on the back of many children having had up to 6 months of limited social and educational experience.

Further damage has been done by the pointless risk-assessment fillers like bubbles, limiting extra curricular experiences, scrapping outdoor sports days etc (oh the irony while Wembley and Wimbledon were filled...)

Much of the damage has been done by government policy. Further damage has been done by some self-serving teachers more interested in "Stay Safe" than prioritising the needs of their pupils. If these teachers had had their way on part-time timetables and more time out of school, even more damage would have been done.

The educational and social damage was inevitable. This "granny-killer's" been pointing that out for nearly two years.

We know the government's happy to penny pinch on education (which is why demands on ventilation etc were never realistic). It's less surprising that the government are bailing on their airy promises than their socially distanced wine and cheese gatherings.

BogRollBOGOF · 12/03/2022 14:18

In the USA where many states were far, far worse than the UK, they've dropped their development standards to cover up how many children have been failed and are below 2019 expectations of normal development. It's not just our government that dick around like this.

BluebellsGreenbells · 12/03/2022 14:26

Considering we’ve been saying for years they cover far too much for the exams - I don’t see what’s wrong with lowering the required content. It helps massively.

Let’s say they drop trigonometry from the maths paper because it’s not been covered, it’s hardly likely to have a massive impact on overall exam grades.

RuleWithAWoodenFoot · 12/03/2022 15:47

I don't know why everyone on this thread is just going on about what should have happened. We are where we are, the government is failing to fulfil promises made about academic catch up, and doesn't seem to care about social and emotional catch up (see funding cuts to MH services and CAMHS).

Where are Us4Them now? Haven't heard a peep.

ReadyToMoveIt · 12/03/2022 15:53

@RuleWithAWoodenFoot

I don't know why everyone on this thread is just going on about what should have happened. We are where we are, the government is failing to fulfil promises made about academic catch up, and doesn't seem to care about social and emotional catch up (see funding cuts to MH services and CAMHS).

Where are Us4Them now? Haven't heard a peep.

Because sadly, other than write to my MP (again), I don’t have any solutions. I know the government is failing to deliver. I completely expected that to happen, and anyone who thought it would happen is insane. I don’t know what to do about it though.