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An education recovery plan is now being drawn up and will be launched in September
YORK education leaders are developing plans to help school children recover from the impact the pandemic has had on their studies and social lives. Education bosses launched a survey to ask parents, carers, school staff and pupils for their views on how to help young people recover from the pandemic. An education recovery plan is now being drawn up and will be launched in September. But school leaders warn York is likely to get less Government funding for the work because it is based on the number of disadvantaged children receiving the Pupil Premium.
A pupil at All Saints RC School in York taking a Covid test THOUSANDS of pupils will begin to return to school in York and North Yorkshire after months of remote learning. All children will be able to return to class from Monday under the first step to ease restrictions, but secondary schools can stagger the return of students over the week to allow for mass testing.
As The Press revealed on Saturday, every state secondary school in York is set to reopen to pupils today bucking national trends. The chairman of the city’s Schools and Academies Board, John Tomsett, said there will be no need for a staggered start at any of the nine state secondaries.
EVERY state secondary school in York is set to reopen to pupils on Monday (March 8) bucking national trends. As the first measure taking the country out of the third national coronavirus lockdown, schools are allowed to reopen fully from Monday, but many across England have needed to stagger start dates because of the enormity of the task of swab testing thousands of pupils. It comes after last month, the Department for Education announced that all secondary pupils should be offered a test for Covid-19 before setting foot back in school. The government said that a staggered start to term was permitted, so that schools could test pupils, year group by year group over the first week back.