Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Schools NFF and other changes for (DfE info session)

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Schools NFF and other changes for (DfE info session)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Schools NFF and other changes for 2019-20 (DfE info session)
Schools Forum 11th July 2018

2 The schools NFF in The schools NFF will be broadly the same as the NFF, with the following key differences (already announced): The funding floor will increase to 1% against The gains cap will increase to 6.09% against The minimum per pupil funding levels will increase to £3,500 and £4,800 for primary and secondary schools respectively LA commissioned places (£10K)

3 Schools NFF – minor changes
Protecting new schools as if they were open in Use theoretical baselines to protect new schools as if they were open in Primary Low Prior Attainment A small reduction to the primary LPA factor value. To reflect the cohort increase that has followed changes to the Early Years Foundation Stage Profile. Changing the minimum per pupil levels for middle schools, KS3-only and KS4-only schools Introduce a new minimum per pupil level for KS4-only schools, and increase the minimum used for the KS3 year groups in middle schools (we will also apply this KS3 rate to KS3-only schools.

4 Changes to Growth funding
Introducing a growth factor: Based on lagged pupil growth data Measured at the level of middle super output areas With an additional amount to recognise the cost of new schools With protection against large losses compared to allocations as we transition to the factor and a cap on gains. That maintains the national spend on growth in per pupil.

5 Growth calculation Measuring growth
Calculate a proxy for growth by comparing pupil numbers between the two most recent October censuses in each middle super output area (MSOA). Only positive increases will be counted. The proposed unit values (subject to confirmation) for each measured ‘growth’ pupil are: £1,370 for each primary pupil £2,050 for each secondary pupil The growth factor will provide an additional amount of £65,000 for each new school recorded on the October census.

6 Schools NFF in 2019/20 2019-20 allocations
Publish actual PUFs and SUFs and illustrative LA and school level allocations in July, and publishing details of the methodology for calculating growth funding, including a worked example. Final allocations for will be calculated following the October 2018 census as last year. These will be confirmed in December.

7 Next steps beyond 2019/20 Next steps beyond 2019-20
The DfE will continue to develop an approach to premises and mobility factors, and keep other factors under review. In particular, they will continue to develop an approach to growth that is consistent with a ‘hard’ NFF.

8 The CSSB in The CSSB will be very similar to , with the following differences: The DSG allocations published in December 2017 will form the baselines for CSSB in In LAs will be allowed to gain a maximum of 2.14% on a per-pupil basis. Permitted gains in per-pupil funding are set at the highest level possible that ensures the total CSSB funding does not exceed the available budget The maximum per-pupil reduction in funding for ongoing functions each LA will receive is 2.5%, as in

9 The CSSB in In we will fund LAs on the basis of the full historic commitments budget agreed for and allow them to use elsewhere any savings made within this allocation as they reduce budgets We have already confirmed that funding for historic commitments will be allocated based on evidence, with the expectation that historic commitments will reduce over time, for example when a contract has reached its end point. Therefore there is no continuing protection for historic commitments in the central school services block. From onwards, we expect to start reducing the funding given to authorities for historic commitments by a set percentage, where authorities do not reduce the expenditure of their own accord.

10 School resource management self –assessment tool
Purpose: to support schools with a consistent and robust method of making a self-assessment of how they manage their resources to deliver good outcomes for their pupils Content: A checklist: a development of the current SFVS A dashboard: a data-based element which looks at how a school’s data compares to thresholds, which are set using the data for all schools Timings: a voluntary version for academies, made available for September 2018, and a mandatory version for maintained schools, replacing SFVS from April 2019


Download ppt "Schools NFF and other changes for (DfE info session)"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google