• The appointment of new directors of enterprise and employment in schools to improve careers advice in schools and advise
pupils on apprenticeships and higher education.
Not exact matches
Amongst other achievements, the Welsh Liberal Democrats secured an increase in the
Pupil Premium so every school receives # 1,150 per pupil on free school meals, a Young Persons» Bus Pass, and 5,000 new apprentices
Pupil Premium so every school receives # 1,150 per
pupil on free school meals, a Young Persons» Bus Pass, and 5,000 new apprentices
pupil on free school meals, a Young Persons» Bus Pass, and 5,000 new
apprenticeships.
These include: the
Pupil Premium which means every school receives # 1,150 per pupil on free school meals, a Young Persons» Bus Pass, and 5,000 new apprentices
Pupil Premium which means every school receives # 1,150 per
pupil on free school meals, a Young Persons» Bus Pass, and 5,000 new apprentices
pupil on free school meals, a Young Persons» Bus Pass, and 5,000 new
apprenticeships.
Apprenticeships are very much in the news at the moment,
pupils can work with a company and also study a work - based qualification a day a week with a local College, meaning they are learning the trade while
on the job.
The government did however introduce a statutory duty
on schools in 2014 to advise
pupils on all post-16 routes, including vocational careers such as
apprenticeships and not just university.
The tutor programme is designed to meet the needs of all
pupils and will support with UCAS,
apprenticeships, job seeking skills and so
on.
An annual Year 9 careers fair in May helps
pupils to meet with key employers and training providers, as well as special lessons for the whole year
on the same day explaining pathways in education, employment and
apprenticeships.
It could include # 2.5 billion for the
pupil premium (Lib Dems), three million
apprenticeships (Conservative), ensuring all teachers are qualified (Labour), bringing free schools and academies under local authority control (Green) or schools investigated by Ofsted
on the presentation of a petition to the DfE signed by 25 per cent of parents or governors (UKIP)... or something entirely different.
Four multi-academy trusts are gearing up to offer jobs to former
pupils and send staff to train apprentices in other schools after successfully getting
on to the new register of
apprenticeship providers.
The new register will allow academy trusts to deliver
apprenticeship training to their own staff and
pupils instead of relying
on other providers, such as colleges or a private business.
John Blaney, the executive headteacher of Royal Docks Academy, said he wanted all his
pupils to have the chance to go to any university in the world or embark
on apprenticeships.
The approach leaves the reader with the impression that the apprentice system was an idyllic time when tutor and
pupil collaborated
on learning necessary skills and that the whole enterprise of teaching legal writing was undone by Langdell because he did not believe that writing was important.5 This impression is a false one: the
apprenticeship system was far from an idyllic legal writing pedagogy, 6 and Langdell is at worst an unwilling and unwitting villain, given his enthusiastic participation in the legal writing curriculum of his day.7