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In March 1999 the Government launched Excellence in Cities in England
to try to resolve the educational problems of inner cities that
successive governments have failed to resolve. It is intended to
raise standards and transform the culture of low expectations and
achievement. £200 million was spent on it in 2001-02, with
£300 million in 2002-03. It now covers 58 local authority
areas, with 96 action zones tackling smaller pockets of deprivation
in towns and suburbs. In summer 2001, the percentage point increase
in pupils achieving five GCSEs at A*-C in Excellence in City schools
was almost double that of schools not in the programme.
Only 33% of inner-city pupils get 5 or more GCSE A*-C grades (or
vocational equivalent. Nationally, 46% reach that level. Results
have improved by around 1% a year for the past 3 years. 13.5% of
all inner city secondary schools have been identified by OFSTED
so far as having serious weaknesses or requiring special measures
compared with 5.4% nationally.
The programme has seven main strands:
- In-school learning mentors
- Learning support units for difficult pupils
- Programmes to stretch the most able 5 to 10% of pupils
- City learning centres to promote school and community learning
through state-of-the-art technology
- Encouraging schools to become beacons and specialists
- Action zones, where a cluster of schools work together
The Government's target is that by 2002, 50% of pupils should achieve
get 5 or more GCSE A*-C grades.
The strategy focuses on six large conurbations - Inner London,
Birmingham, Manchester/Salford, Liverpool/Knowsley, Leeds/Bradford.
Excellence in Cities aims to:
- radically expand and recast the specialist and beacon school
programmes with a special emphasis on the inner cities through
new twinning and designation arrangements. The number of specialist
schools will rise to at least 800 nationally by 2002/3. A target
of 1000 beacon schools by 2002 has been set, with priority to
be given to inner city areas so that every community has a beacon
of excellence
- extend opportunities for gifted and talented children
with special programmes for the highest performing five to 10%
of pupils in each secondary school, including university summer
schools and the introduction of new 'world class' tests
- launch a new network of learning centres, in the inner
cities, developing existing schools as centres of excellence with
modern ICT facilities, pioneering new approaches to learning and
greatly extending opportunities after school and in the holidays;
they will establish strong links with neighbouring schools; They
will also provide local sites for the University for Industry
and provide assistance with business links and skills training.
The first 30 learning centres will be up and running in the target
areas by September 2000 with more to follow in the succeeding
two years
- encourage setting by schools to meet individual aptitudes
and abilities
- give a new emphasis to literacy and numeracy teaching
and ensure better transition from primary to secondary school,
in particular for pupils not up to standard at the end of primary
school; expand the number o summer schools and after-school programmes
- introduce a scheme of low-cost home computer lease for
pupils and adults who face particular disadvantages.
Further, the Government intends to launch a programme to build on
success, overcome barriers to effective learning and tackle failure.
It is planned that this will:
- strengthen school leadership, with new measures to recruit
and train successful teachers and headteachers, and to strengthen
school governing bodies through a one-stop shop to recruit and
place governors with skills and vision in inner city schools
- turn around the weakest schools. Every failing school
will be improved, closed or given a fresh start under a new headteacher
with a successful record. Weak schools will be twinned with successful
schools. Using national data, the DfEE will monitor on a regular
six-monthly basis the 200 lowest-performing secondary schools
- modernise LEAs, ensuring that each has an effective strategy
for school improvement, and accelerating the inspection of inner
city LEAs. Inspections in all target areas will be underway by
April 2000. The Government intends to intervene decisively where
LEA services are failing, using contractors where necessary
- tackle disruption in schools more effectively by ensuring
that every school has access to a Learning Support Unit where
children can be referred when necessary, and by giving the strongest
support to headteachers and teachers in establishing high expectations
and standards
- provide a 'learning mentor' for every young person who
needs one, as a single point of contact to tackle barriers to
pupils' learning
- introduce new, smaller Education Action
Zones (later renamed EiC action zones) to focus on low
performance in small cluster schools
- provide subsidised loans to teachers for the purchase of
computers.
Estelle Morris is Minister for Inner City Education. She will lead
a strategy group including successful headteachers to oversee its
implementation. The Secretary of State for Education and Employment
will report annually on standards and opportunities in the inner cities
and the progress the measures to raise them.
(Excellence in Cities, DfEE)
A full copy of this document is available on the Standards Site
at
www.standards.dfee.gov.uk/excellence
The key elements are:
Learning mentors: access
to full-time learning mentors for pupils who need them in EiC areas.
Their role is to tackle barriers to learning wherever they arise
(in school or beyond). The initiative began in September 1999
Learning centres: a network of school-based learning centres,
usually based in specialist schools, to act as centres of excellence.
These will provide state-of-the-art ICT-based learning opportunities
for pupils at the host school, for pupils at a network of surrounding
schools and for the wider community. The first 30 were scheduled
to be in place by September 2000
Learning Support Units: these are to tackle disruption,
and will be shared between schools. Pupils with problems can be
taught there until they are ready to return to the classroom
Measures to promote better teaching, leadership and governorship:
these are to be set in inner city areas including better recruitment,
training and retention. It will include a one-stop shop to recruit
and place governors with skills and vision in inner city schools
New smaller Education Action Zones: to tackle small clusters
of failure (later renamed EiC action zones)
Extended opportunities for gifted and talented pupils in
inner cities through in-school programmes and extension activities
beyond schools (eg in learning centres and through university summer
schools. This began in September 1999.
Specialist and beacon schools: these are to be radically
expanded with a particular focus on those serving inner city areas.
(Source: Annex 1, Schools Plus)
Excellence in Cities projects:
On 30 April 2003, in the House of Commons, Damian Green asked
the Secretary of State for Education and Skills how many excellence
in cities projects in England (a) opened, (b) closed and (c) were
operating in each year since 1997, broken down by local education
authority.
David Miliband responded:
The EiC programme was launched in 1999-there were no programmes
running in either 1997 or 1998. No EiC partnership has closed. The
programme was introduced in three phases.
Phase 1 began in September 1999 with 25 LEAs. These were
Knowsley, Liverpool, Manchester, Salford, Bradford, Leeds, Rotherham,
Sheffield, Birmingham, Camden, Corporation of London, Greenwich,
Hackney, Hammersmith and Fulham, Haringey, Islington, Kensington
and Chelsea, Lambeth, Lewisham, Newham, Southwark, Tower Hamlets,
Waltham Forest, Wandsworth, Westminster.
Phase 2 in September 2000 extended the programme to 23 additional
authorities: Halton, Rochdale, Sefton, St. Helens, Wirral, Gateshead,
Hartlepool, Middlesbrough, Newcastle upon Tyne, North Tyneside,
Redcar and Cleveland, South Tyneside, Stockton-on-Tees, Sunderland,
Kingston upon Hull, Solihull, Stoke-on-Trent, Leicester, Nottingham,
Barking and Dagenham, Brent, Ealing, Bristol.
Phase 3 in September 2001 again extended the programme to
include 10 additional authorities: Blackburn with Darwen, Blackpool,
Oldham, Barnsley, Doncaster, Sandwell, Wolverhampton, Luton, Enfield,
Hounslow.
September 2001 also saw the inclusion of Excellence Clusters
in the programme to tackle smaller pockets of deprivation. Further
Clusters have since been established in the following authorities:
2001 - Lancashire (2), Tameside, Cumbria, Kirklees (2), Walsall,
Coventry, Croydon, Portsmouth, Kent.
2002 - Thurrock, Barnet, Durham, Cheshire, Derby, Buckinghamshire,
Hillingdon, Lancashire, Milton Keynes, Norwich, Peterborough, Stockport,
Wigan. In addition Preston Education Action Zone transformed to
a cluster.
2003 - From September further clusters will be created in
the following authorities: Kent (3), Lincolnshire (3), Northamptonshire,
Essex, Derbyshire, Havering, Bexley, Swindon and North Lincolnshire.
The current Phase 2 Solihull Partnership will convert to a cluster.
In addition ,five Education Action Zones will transform into clusters:
Croydon (New Addington), Grimsby, Herefordshire, Trafford and Weston.
2004 - In January a further six Zones will transform into
clusters: East Basildon, East Brighton, Halifax, Plymouth, Thetford
and Wigan.
(Education Parliamentary Monitor, 5 May 2003)
A multi-million pound scheme to improve inner-city schools has significantly
raised exam results, contradicting research that suggested the scheme
had made little difference. The Excellence in Cities (EiC) programme
was criticised after a government-commissioned evaluation by the
National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER) found there
was no evidence it improved GCSE grades in English and science.
But an Ofsted report in December 2005 said that the £386
million scheme was highly successful and had contributed to a steady
improvement in GCSE results. Schools increased the proportion of
pupils who gained five A* to C grades by 5.2 percentage points over
the past three years, narrowing the gap with other schools from
10.4 to 7.8 points.
Inspectors said the EiC initiative had improved social inclusion
and standards in England's poorest areas since its launch in 1999.
In eight out of 10 EiC schools visited, the leadership and management
were highly effective and had made the most of their extra money,
an average of £120 per pupil a year. However, improvements
had been hampered in a few schools because of weak leadership and
poor coordination.
The Ofsted report, based on visits in autumn 2004 and spring 2005
was more positive than the NFER study, which tracked the EiC scheme
up to 2003. The Department for Education and Skills said the NFER's
findings were "out of date" and the EiC was an "indisputable
success".
EiC: Managing associated initiatives to improve standards
is available from www.ofsted.gov.uk
EiC: The national evaluation is available from www.dfes.gov.uk
(TES, 2 December 2005)
A flagship government strategy designed to improve schools in deprived
inner-city areas has made a significant impact on reducing truancy
and raising educational attainment.
Research into the Excellence in Cities (EiC) initiative also found
that while it had boosted maths results, it had not improved the
performance in English and science of children aged 11 to 14.
The study was carried out by researchers from the National Foundation
for Educational Research, the London School of Economics and the
Institute of Fiscal Studies. The researchers concluded EiC had helped
promote a positive ethos towards learning and improved pupils' motivation
and behaviour.
A large part of the success was put down to mentoring. The report
said, "Teachers and senior school managers felt that learning
mentors were improving self-esteem and confidence and helping some
pupils to re-engage with education."
Excellence in Cities:the national evaluation of a policy to
raise standards in urban schools is available from www.dfes.gov.uk
(New Start, 2 December 2005)
Primary schools involved in the Excellence in Cities programme
are helping pupils achieve their potential, according to a report.
However, inspectors said that a minority of teachers were reluctant
to accept that higher standards were achievable. The study, from
the Office for Standards in Education, found that the Government
programme has helped most schools involved raise expectations and
broaden the range of experiences available to pupils. Where it was
most effective, it has raised self-esteem among disadvantaged youngsters.
Inspectors, who visited 28 primaries, found that results at key
stage 2 were improving at a higher rate in EiC primaries than in
other schools nationally, and attendance has improved at five times
the national rate since 1998.
(TES, 17 December 2004)
The Government's main programme for improving inner-city primary
schools in England is increasing the self-esteem of pupils rather
than their academic results, a report by Ofsted has found. Behaviour
and attendance improved in the 1,104 primaries taking part in the
Excellence in Cities (EiC) programme. But more than a third of schools
failed to monitor pupils' progress in class properly.
One in seven was hostile to a requirement that they identify gifted
and talented pupils for more challenging work, believing that this
undermined equal opportunities. Instead, they spent funds allocated
for the top 5 per cent of pupils on equipment and books that could
be used by all children.
The Government has spent more than £1 billion on the EiC
policy since its introduction as a secondary schools programme in
1999, and plans to spend another £700 million by 2006. It
was expanded to include primary schools in 2000; the Government
has spent £178 million on them.
(The Times, 16 December 2004)
Multi-million pound government initiatives to raise school standards
in deprived areas are of dubious benefit, and can even be counter-productive,
according to research. Labour has spent hundreds of millions of
pounds since 1997 on schemes such as Excellence in Cities and education
action zones, but the Cardiff University study found the money has
been poorly targeted, with the schemes reaching only a small proportion
of the people they were supposed to help. It said that in some cases
the initiatives, designed to help schooling in pockets of deprivation,
have compounded the problems they were designed to overcome.
Chris Taylor, co-author of the study, suggested it was wrong to
tackle the wide-spread problem of deprivation by focusing efforts
and money on small areas. "The idea that problems exist in
a particular area is wrong," he said. "Problems are spread
more widely and levels of disadvantage change over time."
Programmes have focused on short-term goals and improvements have
been patchy. Inspection and research evidence showed action zones
met few of their original objectives such as to be test beds for
innovation. In some, educational attainment actually fell as a result
of the Government's intervention, the study found. At the initiative's
height there were more than 73 large zones covering more than 1,400
schools but their number shrunk to six after the Government decided
to phase them out. They have been replaced by 130 smaller EiC action
zones, mostly in urban areas, which typically involve one secondary
and a cluster of primaries. The study found the requirement for
areas to bid for money had forced them to emphasise their problems,
such as domestic abuse and violence, reinforcing negative perceptions
that hamper their recovery. It also accused the Government of ignoring
historical evidence that shows area-based initiatives reach as few
as one in five of the most disadvantaged children.
The promise and perils of area-based initiatives: the UK experience,
by Sally Power, Gareth Rees and Chris Taylor is available from PowerS3@cf.ac.uk
(TES, 22 April 2005)
Leeds-based education charity Learning Partnerships has been asked
to set up a second Excellence in Cities (EiC) action zone by the
Department for Education and Skills. Learning Partnerships aims
to raise the profile of literacy in the local community, make learning
fun, and ensure that children have someone to read with and have
access to books outside of school.
The zone will cover six primary schools in Beeston and Holbeck,
and will be funded by Education Leeds, an organisation which runs
support services for schools on behalf of Leeds City Council.
There are now 102 EiC action zones (formerly called small education
action zones) across the country.
(Regeneration & Renewal, 23 January 2004)
More information on Learning
Partnerships
Three of the Government's key initiatives to help pupils from disadvantaged
backgrounds are failing to put enough emphasis on raising achievement,
education watchdogs warned in October 2003. While promising work
can be found in 'excellence clusters' and city learning centres
- both part of the Excellence in Cities programme - as well as the
second round of education action zones (EAZs), inspectors said progress
was not quick enough.
A report produced by the Office for Standards in Education (Ofted)
earlier in 2003 found the programmes were having inconsistent impact
on attainment. Three subsequent reports published in October drew
many of the same conclusions.
England's chief inspector, David Bell, said attendance, behaviour
and attitudes to education were improving in excellence clusters
but the pace of change was too slow. He said more needed to be done
on all three programmes to make sure that work contributed more
"consistently and rapidly to the overall aim of tackling barriers
to achievement in disadvantaged areas".
City learning centres, set up in 2002, were beginning to become
established but were failing to focus on raising attainment and
improving teaching. While EAZs also demonstrated some innovative
strategies, they lacked focus on the central objective - to raise
attainment.
Graham Lane, chair of the Local Government Association;s education
committee, said: "I think certainly in the case of city learning
centres, it's too early for assessment. You will need three to four
years before you can expect to see progress. There is already hard
evidence that pupil attainment and attendance and teacher retention
have improved in schools in the education action zones compared
to the borough averages."
The three reports - Excellence clusters: the first ten inspections,
Excellence in Cities: city learning academies and Education
action zones: tackling difficult issues in round two zones -
are available at www.ofsted.gov.uk.
Tony Blair's flagship policy for transforming standards in inner-city
schools has produced little or no improvement in pupils' results
despite hundreds of millions of pounds in spending, according to
a study by the Office for Standards in Education.
The Excellence in Cities programme (EiC) was launched personally
by the Prime Minister in 1999 but the inspection service says there
is little evidence so far that inner-city schools are closing the
gap in achievement with pupils in more privileged areas.
One source told The Times: "It has had an effect but it's
not on attainment. It's mainly been on changing attitudes of disadvantaged
kids, basically making them feel better about underachieving at
school.
"The impact has been better on younger pupils than older ones,
but the wide gap in achievement still remains. The effects have
been pretty negligible."
The policy has achieved benefits by improving behaviour management
of difficult pupils, reducing expulsions and cutting truancy in
schools working against entrenched social problems.. But it concludes
that: "the impact on the programme of achievement is more variable".
Improved classroom standards were evident among younger pupils
in primary schools but much less visible among secondary children.
The report will be embarrassing for ministers who have invested
huge sums of money and political capital into a programme that now
covers a third of the country's secondary school pupils.
(Times, 27 May 2003)
The Government reacted angrily to claims by Ofsted that its
flagship programme to transform standards in inner city schools
is ineffective. A spokeswoman for the Department for Education and
Skills immediately dismissed the reports. She said: "It is
totally ridiculous to suggest that EiC has had no impact. The facts
speak for themselves. Standards in EiC areas have improved faster
than elsewhere in the country."
She admitted that improvement had been uneven, saying: "They
have improved most in areas where they have been set up the longest.
In [EiC areas in] inner London, Birmingham, Leeds and Liverpool,
GCSE standards have improved at almost double the rate of the rest
of the country."
Phil Street, chief executive of national education charity the Community
Education Development Centre, agreed that EiCs have had a positive
impact. He said: "The local EiC programmes have been good at
focusing on key areas and helping gifted students while creating
a better environment for all students to succeed. In general they
are much more targeted and much less bureaucratic than Education
Action Zones.
(Regeneration and Renewal, 30 May 2003)
- Between 1999 and 2001 the proportion of children achieving
level 5 or above in key stage 3 in English rose by about 2.5%
in Excellence in Cities areas compared to 0.5% elsewhere.
- Where the EiC scheme had been in place from September 1999,
the proportion of pupils gaining five or more A-C* grades at GCSE
rose by 2.9% from 1999-2001, compared with 2.1% elsewhere.
- Where the EiC scheme had been in place from September 2000,
the proportion of pupils gaining five or more A-C* grades at GCSE
rose by 1.3% from 2000-2001, compared with 0.7% elsewhere.
The final wave of Excellence in Cities zones was launched in March
2002. The six zones launched by Schools Standards Minister Stephen
Timms bring the total to 100, targeting individual secondary schools
and their feeder primaries. They are in Blackpool, Doncaster, Enfield,
Hounslow, Luton and Sandwell. Each zone will receive £250,000
a year for three years, and the education department has agreed
to match-fund private sponsorship. The zones aim to improve exam
results and tackle pupil disaffection.
The scheme now covers 58 local authorities and one third of English
secondary school pupils, and will have a budget of £300 million
by 2003/4. Many of the large education action zones are expected
to become Excellence in Cities zones when their statutory lifespan
ends.
(New Start, 22 March 2002)
The Government's flagship Excellence in Cities initiative has given
a significant boost to schools in some of the country's most deprived
areas.
As ministers unveiled the first annual report on the programme,
union leaders admitted that hundreds of schools had benefited from
extra funding and staff.
Early findings indicated that exam results in the areas covered
by the scheme are improving more quickly than in others and that
the numbers leaving with no qualifications had dropped twice as
fast.
Launching the report at the end of January 2001, school standards
minister Estelle Morris announced an expansion of the mentor element
of the scheme that aims to give demanding pupils one-to-one attention.
She said an annual budget of more than £1000 million would
be used to double the number of paid learning mentor posts in secondary
schools from 1,500 to 3,200 by 2004, while 900 would be appointed
to primaries by the end of this academic year.
City learning centres are to get an extra £150,000 to bring
in internet and video technology.
Growth of programme
- September 1999: Phase One covers secondary schools in 25 local
education authorities.
- September 2000: a further 22 areas join up, along with primary
pilots in Phase One areas.
- September 2001: a further 10 areas to join. Programme will
then cover more than 1000 schools - about a third of all secondary-age
pupils in the country.
The Excellence in Cities annual report is available from
http://www.standards.dfee.gov.uk/excellence
(TES 26, January 2001)
Department for Education and Skills, April 2002, reference DfES/0232/2002
This evaluation looks at the history of the Excellence in Cities
programme to date, providing examples of activities taking place
around each of its key strands: learning mentors, learning support
units, extended opportunities for gifted and talented children,
a City Learning Centres network, EiC action zones, Beacon schools,
and specialist schools. It also provides evidence of the measurable
impact of the initiative. Emerging statistical data shows that Excellence
in Cities programmes are beginning to have a beneficial impact.
Most schools are using the additional resources well, and the work
of learning mentors has been particularly encouraging. In terms
of impact on attainment, the performance tables for 2000 and 2001
show that on average results are improving faster in EiC schools
than elsewhere, particularly at key stage 3 where many of the partnerships
have targeted their resources. Action for the future includes
publishing examples of good practice to share across all EiC partnerships.
Contact DfES Publications on 0845 60 222 60 or visit www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/excellence.
Rural and seaside towns plus former mining areas are to be included
in the Government's Excellence in Cities programme after an analysis
confirmed that low-achieving schools were not confined to the inner
city.
From September 2001 smaller pockets of deprivation will get extra
funds to help them raise standards, provide extra challenges for
gifted children and tackle problems such as truancy.
Burnley, Dewsbury, Walsall, Croydon, West Cumbria, Folkestone and
Portsmouth will be the first areas to benefit from the expanded
scheme which will also give them funds to tackle specific local
problems.
(TES, 20 October 2000)
Fourteen small education action zones started in September 2000
as part of the Excellence in Cities programme to raise standards
of education in the most deprived urban areas.
The new small zones are in Birmingham, Camden, Haringey, Islington,
Knowsley, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, and Southwark. Each zone
is concentrating on a secondary school and its feeder schools and
is targeting improvements in exam results.
DfEE contact: Cath Rouke, EIC Project Team: cath.rouke@dfee.co.uk
Government schemes for gifted youngsters at comprehensive schools
are being filled by middle-class children, research has found.
Schemes for gifted and talented pupils have been running in six
inner-city areas since September 1999 as part of the Excellence
in Cities programme. The initiative was extended to cover 23 more
authorities in September 2000. It now involves more than 800 secondaries
representing around 20% of secondary schools in England.
According to a study by King's College London, middle class children
are coming under tremendous parental pressure to qualify for the
scheme. Interviews with 45 children from eight London schools revealed
all the pupils on the programme came from middle-class homes.
In a wider trawl, the researchers interviewed more than 450 11-year-olds
and their parents to gauge the pressures on pupils as they made
the transition to secondary school. Middle class girls were much
more anxious about their performance than middle-class boys.
(TES, 15 September 2000)
The Government is taking on 800 new "learning mentors" over the
next two years. They will be staff
with full-time troubleshooting roles in 450 schools covered by Labour's
"excellence in cities" initiative,
designed to raise standards in urban areas. They will not teach,
although most are expected to be qualified teachers.
Mentors will work to help children who have problems at home and
save classroom teachers from the
combined roles of counsellor, social worker and financial advisor.
Ministers hope the appointments will help raise standards and help
to cut truancy, arguing that many teachers are diverted from the
blackboard to sort out their pupils' problems. But they also hope
the mentors will help the brightest children by showing them how
to make the best
use of their abilities.
( Independent, 9 December 1999)
IBM is investing £1 million over the next two years in new
technologies in Beacon Schools. Initially 50 Beacon schools will
benefit and the programme will ultimately be available to more than
1,000 Beacon schools across England.
"IBM's Reinventing Education Programme will mean that teachers
will be able to share lesson plans and activities and spread good
practice between Beacon schools and other schools in their areas,"
said Estelle Morris at the launch of the project.
IBM launched the Reinventing Education grant programme in 1994,
and to date has invested over £40 million worldwide. The objective
is to improve student achievement by using IBM technology and
expertise as part of a comprehensive strategy for lasting change
in education systems. Evaluation of the first Reinventing Education
projects has shown that IBM's technical expertise, deployed in collaboration
with local education leadership, can make a unique and significant
difference to schools.
(DfEE Press Release, 2 December 1999)
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