Service Pupil Premium 

Digby the Tedder Primary School - Service Pupil Premium 

 

Digby The Tedder Primary School is located on the base of RAF Digby. Currently, our school has approximately 96.4% of pupils who are from a Forces family.   

What is the Service Pupil Premium?

The Department for Education (DfE) introduced the Service pupil premium (SPP) in April 2011 in recognition of the specific challenges children from service families face and as part of the commitment to delivering the armed forces covenant.

State schools, academies and free schools in England, which have children of service families in school years reception to year 11, can receive the SPP funding. It is designed to assist the school in providing the additional support that these children may need and was worth £310 per service child who meets the eligibility criteria. For 22/ 23 the funding increased to £320 per service child.

Eligibility Criteria:

Pupils attract SPP if they meet one of the following criteria:

·        one of their parents is serving in the regular armed forces (including pupils with a parent who is on full commitment as part of the full time reserve service)

·        they have been registered as a ‘service child’ on a school census since 2016, see note on the DfE’s ever 6 service child measure

·        one of their parents died whilst serving in the armed forces and the pupil receives a pension under the Armed Forces Compensation Scheme or the War Pensions Scheme

Children have to be flagged as service children ahead of the autumn school census deadline. Service parents need to make the school aware of their status by talking to the head teacher or school admin staff.

The purpose of the Service pupil premium

Eligible schools receive the SPP so that they can offer mainly pastoral support during challenging times and to help mitigate the negative impact on service children of family mobility or parental deployment.

Mobility is when a service family is posted from one location to another, including overseas and within the UK.

Deployment is when a service person is serving away from home for a period of time. This could be a 6 to 9-month tour of duty, a training course or an exercise which could last for a few weeks

How Service pupil premium differs from the pupil premium

The SPP is there for schools to provide mainly pastoral support for service children, whereas the pupil premium (PP) was introduced to raise attainment and accelerate progress within disadvantaged groups.

Schools should not combine SPP with the main PP funding and the spending of each premium should be accounted for separately.

What could the Service pupil premium be used for?

In order to support the pastoral needs of service children, schools have flexibility over how they use the SPP, as they are best placed to understand and respond to the specific needs of those pupils for whom the funding has been allocated. The funding could be spent on providing a variety of means of support including counselling provision, nurture groups etc.

Schools might also consider how to improve the level of and means of communication between the child and their deployed parents. Some schools have introduced ‘skype time’ clubs, whilst other schools have helped children to develop scrapbooks and diaries that they can show their parents on their return, highlighting their achievements and day to day school life. In addition, staff hours may be required to support the needs of service children when they join a new school as a result of a posting or when a parent is deployed, and these hours could be funded by the SPP.

Within schools which experience high levels of service pupil mobility, Mobility co-ordinators, Forces liaison officers, Parent support advisors etc. have been employed. These posts tend to work closely with the pupils and families when they move into the area or are due to leave. Such staff can also support pupils and families where a parent is deployed.

SPP should not be used to subsidise routine school activity (trips, music lessons etc.). Schools may choose to fund school trips just for service children, to help them enjoy their time at school and build a sense of a wider community and understanding of the role their service parent plays (e.g. with military specific trips). This is to help them cope with the potential strains of service life.

Schools are held to account for the spending of this funding through the focus in Ofsted inspections on the progress and attainment of their wider PP eligible pupil cohort.

Grant funding allocated 

2022 - 2023

Pupil Premium Service Personnel - £320 per pupil - Total = £35,200 + £36,898.58 carry forward = £72,098.58

Expenditure - 

  • Staffing - £50,522.23
  • Resources / Equipment for children / Educational visits - £19,139.18
  • Meals - £317.40
  • Specialist services - £2295.00

Slight overspend to 2023 / 24 of £175.23 (This to be paid from Main School budget) 

2021 - 2022

Pupil Premium Service Personnel - £310.00 per pupil - Total = £38,130.00 + £21,553.94 carry forward = £59,683.94

Expenditure -

  • Staffing - £18,394.42
  • Resources / Equipment for children / Educational visits - £3707.44
  • Meals - £333.50
  • Specialist services - £350.00

Carry forward to 2022 /23 = £36,898.58

2020 - 2021

Pupil Premium Service Personnel - £310.00 per pupil - Total = £37,820.00

Expenditure -

  • Staffing - £16,266.06

Carry forward to 2021 / 22 = £21,553.94

NameFormat
Files
2022 23 Services Pupil Premium spend and impact.pdf .pdf
2021 22 Services Pupil Premium spend and impact.pdf .pdf
2020 21 Services Pupil Premium spend and impact.pdf .pdf