Pupil Premium Strategy Statement 2022-25
Pupil premium strategy statement
This statement details our school’s use of pupil premium (and recovery premium for the 2021 to 2022 academic year) funding to help improve the attainment of our disadvantaged pupils.
It outlines our pupil premium strategy, how we intend to spend the funding in this academic year and the effect that last year’s spending of pupil premium had within our school.
Academy overview
Funding overview
Detail Amount
Pupil premium funding allocation this academic year £ 349 020
Recovery premium funding allocation this academic year £ 37 120
Pupil premium funding carried forward from previous years £0 (enter £0 if not applicable)
Total budget for this academic year £ 386 140
If your school is an academy in a trust that pools this funding, state the amount available to your school this academic year
Part A: Pupil premium strategy plan
Statement of intent
Statement of intent
Co-op Academy Woodlands is vibrant and happy. Our staff team is caring, kind, enthusiastic, hardworking and positive. We have some experience on the leadership team and we are an outlooking school finding better ways to improve the experience for our pupils to ensure they all succeed.
Co-op Academy Woodlands serves a unique community. We are a larger than average 2 form entry school In the Harehills/Gipton area in Leeds.The local area is identified as one of high deprivation (0.42, compared to a national average of 0.21), with high levels of unemployment and, often, over-crowded housing. We have 63% of children who speak English as an additional language. Moreover, a large percentage of our children start school with very low levels of language..
With the aim of improving pupils’ life chances/script we are passionate about giving our pupils, including those eligible for Pupil Premium funding, the knowledge and aspiration they need. To this end, half of our Pupil Premium funding is targeted at ensuring the best possible quality of education for pupils. This focus includes professional development to make sure that teaching is highly effective. Curriculum development work is also a key part of our strategy to ensure that our curriculum is coherently designed and that essential knowledge is prioritised. Learning about careers and employability runs through our curriculum. We are passionate about providing pupils with opportunities outside of their usual experiences and environment to build their cultural capital. As such, some of our Pupil Premium budget will contribute to this.
Our school brings together children from around the world. They bring with them wide-ranging cultural experiences and this is a great resource for our school. Our pupils speak many different languages (37 in the last census). For most of our pupils, developing English language and vocabulary is a high priority in securing their future success at school and beyond. For this reason, we have put language, literature and vocabulary at the heart of our curriculum and take every opportunity to broaden our pupils’ language skills. We acknowledge that some pupils need extra opportunities to practise, rehearse and revisit core knowledge including language, vocabulary, reading and number work. Early identification of need and addressing this quickly and efficiently is key so that our pupils do not fall behind in their learning.
Within our locality, rates of criminal activity are above average for the country. Instances of anti-social behaviour and violent/sexual assault (including domestic abuse) are particularly high. We acknowledge that our pupils (including our disadvantaged pupils) may have increased safeguarding vulnerabilities because of this. Through our curriculum, we prioritise keeping pupils safe and their moral development. We are passionate about our children having the courage to make the right moral choices, regardless of who is watching. For pupils we evaluate as particularly vulnerable, we spend Pupil Premium funds on providing additional support in the form of therapeutic sessions, social skills groups, attendance support, speech and language sessions, SEMH intervention groups and emotion coaching,
A significant proportion of our pupils will only be with us for part of their primary education; some will arrive from or leave to a different area of the UK or a different country. Some might arrive and leave more than once and some will have experienced multiple school moves before they join us.
Through leadership, there is a focus on ensuring the quality of education for all pupils, including disadvantaged and children with SEND is consistent and of high quality leading to improved outcomes for all. Through monitoring and support our leadership ensures teachers are equipped with the knowledge and skill to deliver good quality lessons. Some funding is used to up-skill our teachers so that they are best placed to identify any gaps in pupils’ knowledge and adapt teaching to fill these.
Challenges
This details the key challenges to achievement that we have identified among our disadvantaged pupils.
Intended outcomes
This explains the outcomes we are aiming for by the end of our current strategy plan, and how we will measure whether they have been achieved.
Intended outcome Success criteria
Improved language and vocabulary for our Observation and work in books shows improved disadvantaged pupils language and vocabulary use for our
disadvantaged pupils.
Through the triangulation of evidence (oral language observation, engagement in lessons and book scrutiny, pupils demonstrate the use of a wide range of vocabulary including tier 3.
consistently since Reception) attain in line with other pupils nationally. In 2024/5 average scaled scores are in line with National for Reading and Maths (currently 100 for both) Improved outcomes at the end of the Early Increase percentage of GLD year on year. Years Foundation stage Disadvantaged children attain in line with other children nationally: ELG reading ELG writing ELG number ELG PSED Increased proportion of disadvantaged Disadvantaged children attain in line with other pupils in Year 1, 2 and 3 pass the phonics children nationally screening check. Good and sustained attendendance for all Absences for all pupils are 4% and there is no pupils, in particular disadvantaged pupils gap in attendance for disadvantaged pupils Rates of Persistent absence is no more than 3% above national, There is no gaps in the rates of Persistent Absence for Disadvantaged pupils Disadvantaged pupils access a wide range All disadvantaged pupils: of carefully chosen experiences that build - attend extra-curricular clubs their cultural capital, raise their aspirations - participate in enhancement activities (inc and help them to discover their talents educational visits, workshops etc) and interests. All have leadership opportunities during their time at school. Activity in this academic year This details how we intend to spend our pupil premium (and recovery premium funding) this academic year to address the challenges listed above.
Teaching (for example, CPD, recruitment and retention) |
Improved attainment in Reading, Writing and Maths at the end of Key stage 1 and 2 Disadvantaged pupils at the end of KS1 and Key stage 2 (who have been at the school
English and Maths ( 4 times a week)
Development of teachers and TAs to provide high quality language (oracy) and vocabulary teaching Oral language interventions | Toolkit Strand
| Education Endowment Foundation | EEF
1, 2, 6, 7 Deepening knowledge through vocabulary learning
CPD for staff in EEF research on metacognition
1, 2, 6, 7 collaborative learning EEF research on collaborative learning
CPD for TAs to increase
effectiveness of small group EEF diagnostic assessment and recovery
support in class EEF research 2, 6, 7
Subject leader time for EEF research on phonics
Phonics training for 1, 2, 6, 7 teachers and TAs
Subject leader time DfE guidance on reading
Reading comprehension 1, 2, 6, 7
CPD EEF research on reading comprehension
Subject leader time EEF research on phonics
Monitoring of reading and DfE guidance on reading 1, 2, 6, 7 phonics EEF research on reading comprehension
Individualised support for EEF research on phonics teachers to develop
DfE guidance on reading 1, 2, 6, 7 reading and phonics
teaching EEF research on reading comprehension
Develop and embed
marking and feedback (in EEF diagnostic assessment and recovery
1, 2, 6, 7
the moment for increased EEF Feedback impact)
Release time for senior and middle leaders to EEF Putting evidence to work
1, 2, 6, 7
quality assure wider EEF implementation guidance curriculum subjects Weekly release time for
English and maths leaders EEF Putting evidence to work
1, 2, 6, 7
to quality assure their EEF implementation guidance subjects Use of Director of subjects, SLEs and Director of education time
to improve the quality of Ofsted EIF research 1, 2, 6, 7 education through curriculum and leadership development
Release of EY Lead to EEF Putting evidence to work develop and improve EEF implementation guidance 1, 2, 6, 7
teaching and Learning in EEF Improving language in Early Years
EYFS research
Use of IRiS to develop and improve the quality of
EEF Iris connect research 1, 2, 5
Targeted academic support (for example, tutoring, one-to-one support structured interventions)
Wider strategies (for example, related to attendance, behaviour, wellbeing)
Total budgeted cost
Part B: Review of outcomes in the previous academic year
Pupil premium strategy outcomes
This details the impact that our pupil premium activity had on pupils in the 2020 to 2021 academic year.
Pupil premium strategy outcomes
KS1
All Pupils outperformed Pupil Premium children at the end the end of KS1, the gap between Pupil premium children and All was:
Reading: -6%. The gap between the 2 groups was 4% in the Autumn so it has slightly widened. 6 PP made more than expected progress, moving from AT to working at the higher standard and 1 from WT to AT
Writing: -4%. The gap narrowed compared to Autumn which was 8%. 5 PP children making more than expected progress working at the expected standard, did work at WT from the previous summer.
Maths : -1% results were equitable between the 2 groups. 7 PP children made more than expected progress, 2 working AT from WT and 3 attained the higher standard (one of which was WT at the start of the year.
Reading, writing and maths combined: 2%. The gap between the 2 groups were 8% in Autumn
KS2
All Pupils outperformed Pupil Premium children at the end the end of KS2, the gap between Pupil premium children and All was:
Reading: -9%, this is a significant improvement when comparing to end of KS 1 when the gap was 19%. Stable cohort for All and PP perform better than children joining us after Year 2. 1 PP child making more than expected progress, WT to GD
Writing: -4%. 5 PP children making more than expected progress, 2 working AT and 3 working at the higher standard
Maths: -2%, this is slightly better than outcomes in Autumn when the gap was 4% and improved from KS 1 attainment where the gap was 8%. Biggest increase of number of children attaining the expected standard or higher compared to children joining us after year 2
EGPS: -3%
Reading, Writing and Maths: -4%
In Phonics, All pupils out-performed pupil premium children by 2% in the phonics screening check in 2022:
PP = 73%
Non-PP = 71%
This trend continued in Year 2 for those children that retook the phonics screening check:
- PP = 81% - Non-PP = 84% non-pupil premium children out-performed pupil premium children in achieving Good Level of Development at the end of Reception:
PP = 41%
Non-PP = 47%
Although non- Pupil premium children out perform Pupil Premium overall, the gaps are narrowing and we will continue to strive to ensure that Pupil premium children’s outcomes are in line with All.
Improve attendance and reduce number of Persistent absence - The Attendance Team were at full capacity with a Pastoral Lead, an attendance officer and an attendance support worker. Procedures like first day absence calls and home visits improved significantly. However School data versus national and regional:
Whole School:
Woodlands: 91.4% National: 94.2% Pupil Premium:
Woodlands : 87.9% National: 90.8%
Persistent Absence
Woodlands: 34.7% National 22% Context:
22.6% (29 children) of PAs are our significant families and SEND children that we could not apply legal processes on to improve attendance due to support needs within the family or barriers to education due to SEN. The Cluster has refused to take forward a number of cases until these needs are addressed. These cases have been escalated/ referred and discussed as required.12 PA’s (9.4%) are PA’s as their unauthorised holidays exceeded the threshold automatically tipping them into PA so far.
Pupil Premium children have access to extracurricular clubs and activities mainly by external services. Educational visits, including Jamie’s Farm, were funded so that no child was unable to attend due to their disadvantaged circumstances. Further activities and visits will continue throughout the next academic year, ensuring every child has equal opportunities. The school has also identified specific trips to link with the topic children are covering in the wider curriculum. This will ensure that children have the opportunity to have a variety of trips and visits during their time at Woodlands.