£180 Million New Bursary Scheme To Help The Most Vulnerable 16-19 Years Olds
£180 MILLION NEW BURSARY SCHEME TO HELP THE MOST VULNERABLE 16-19 YEARS OLDS The Government today announced a new £180 million bursary scheme to help the most vulnerable 16-19 years olds continue in full-time education. The scheme is made up of two parts – a guaranteed payment to a small group of the most vulnerable, worth more than anybody got under EMA, and a discretionary fund for schools and colleges to distribute:
The current discretionary fund is £26 million. In future the fund will be worth £180 million. Even after the guaranteed bursaries have been paid to the most vulnerable 12,000, colleges will still have £165M for the discretionary pot. There will also be additional transitional arrangements to help those who are part-way through their studies and are currently receiving the EMA. The transitional arrangements consist of two parts:
Michael Gove MP, Secretary of State for Education, said: "Sadly, we have been falling behind other nations in our educational performance. We have one of the most unequal education systems in the developed world. We have an insufficient supply of high quality vocational education. We have a system of education spending which is fundamentally inefficient. Andy Wilson, Principal of Westminster Kingsway College, said: Seyi Obakin, Chief Executive of Centrepoint, said: 'We welcome the news that the government has allocated £15m to meet the financial needs of vulnerable young people. I know this will mean that further education will now be a real possibility for the homeless young people that Centrepoint helps every day.” The Government will now carry out an 8 week consultation on the scheme so the detailed arrangements can be finalised in time for allocations to be made to learning providers for the 2011/12 academic year. The EMA scheme cost £560 million per year and was paid to 45 per cent of young people. Robust evaluation evidence from the National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER) showed around 90 per cent of those who received EMA would have carried on their education without it. |
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