How Welsh Government will allocate pre-16 education grants in the 2024 to 2025 financial year.
Contents
Aim of the changes
Our pre-16 education grants, which will be available from 1 April 2024, aim to:
- reduce complexity
- provide more transparency
- allow further flexibility of funding
What has been done
We have combined some of our pre-16 education grant funding into 4 funding elements:
- School standards
- Equity
- Reform
- Cymraeg 2050
School standards
School standards funding has been created by merging:
- the Education Improvement Grant (EIG) funding
- the Recruit Recover and Raise Standard (RRRS) funding
- the Early Education (non-maintained settings) funding
From April 2024, this combined funding package will provide support to schools, settings, and local authorities.
Equity
This element consists of funding which supports equity in education policy. Outcomes will support equity policy objectives including:
- pupil development grant (PDG)
- care-experienced children
- attendance
- Minority Ethnic and Gypsy, Roma and Traveller learners
- home-educated learners
- community focused schools
Reform
This element consists of funding which will support education-reform initiatives. It will support outcomes for:
- Curriculum for Wales
- professional learning and leadership
- additional learning needs (ALN)
- the whole-school approach to mental health and wellbeing
Cymraeg 2050
This element consists of funding which supports schools, settings, and local authorities with the Cymraeg 2050 objectives.
All 4 funding elements will be awarded to local authorities via the Local Authority Education Grant (LAEG). Local authorities will be required to delegate most of this funding onto schools and settings. We will ask local authorities to do this as soon as possible in the 2024 to 2025 financial year.
School standards funding
Distribution
The School standards funding is worth a total of £159.9 million. Of this:
- 92.5% will be distributed to schools and for education other than at school provision, this will be called ‘the School Standards Grant’
- 4% will be allocated to local authorities for Early Education, this will include funding for non-maintained settings
- the remaining funding, along with local authorities own (match) funding, will be used to support standards in education
The funding to support standards in education relates to the additional support local authorities give to schools and other settings. This additional support is used to:
- deliver school improvement measures
- raise school standards
The School Standards Grant
How the grant will be set
Grant allocations for the 2024 to 2025 financial year
The formula is based on 2023 PLASC data. However, we have also included additional allocations for any new schools which have opened since this data was published.
The allocations are as follows:
- for every learner from nursery to Year 11 schools will receive £86.06
- for every learner in a rural school in rural urban classifications 1, 2 or 3, schools will receive an additional £86.06
Special schools will receive:
- an additional £172.12 for every learner
- an additional lump sum of £10,000
To support foundation learning ratios:
- for every nursery learner schools will receive an additional £563.60
- for every reception learner schools will receive an additional £1,127.21
- for every Year 1 and Year 2 learner schools will receive an additional £563.60
To support 14 to 16 learning pathways:
- for every Year 10 and Year 11 learner schools will receive an additional £184.35
What this means for schools
Schools will no longer receive EIG or RRRS funding. Instead, they will receive the School Standards Grant. The total amount schools and settings will be receiving for this is £147.9 million.
Other grant funding for schools and settings
Some parts of the Equity and Reform funding elements have funding which will also be delegated to schools and settings. These are as follows:
Equity funding elements
PDG
This is allocated based on the number of learners eligible for free school meals (eFSM) using 2023 PLASC data. It is allocated at a rate of £1,150 per learner. The total amount delegated for this is £114.6 million.
For the 2024 to 2025 financial year, additional PDG funding will be available. This additional funding will be allocated to local authorities for them to decide how it will be distributed. However, we have told local authorities that the full £7.1m additional funding available must be delegated to schools and settings.
Reform funding elements
Curriculum for Wales
This is allocated to local authorities for them to decide how it will be distributed to schools and settings. The total amount for this is £6 million.
Professional learning
This is allocated based on the number of qualified teachers using 2022 School Workforce Annual Census (SWAC) data. For special schools, this number includes some additional staff members. The total amount for this is £12 million.
ALN implementation
This is allocated as a lump sum for each school or setting. There is a further allocation based on the number of learners from nursery to Year 11 using 2023 PLASC data. The total amount for this is £10.4 million.