Tag: Kate Green

  • Kate Green – 2021 Comments on Children at Heart of National Recovery

    Kate Green – 2021 Comments on Children at Heart of National Recovery

    The comments made by Kate Green, the Shadow Secretary of State for Education, in the House of Commons on 27 April 2021.

    The Conservatives have treated children as an afterthought throughout the pandemic and the news that children’s language and social skills have fallen so far behind ought to be a wake up call.

    Government ‘catch-up’ plans fall far short of what is needed for children to recover lost learning, including nothing on wellbeing or social development. In addition, their stealth cut to the pupil premium hinders schools’ ability to put their own plans in place.

    Labour want children to be at the heart of our national recovery. Our plans for breakfast clubs would give all children extra time to socialise with friends, and targeted additional learning at the start of the day.

  • Kate Green – 2021 Comments on Early Years

    Kate Green – 2021 Comments on Early Years

    The comments made by Kate Green, the Shadow Secretary of State for Education, on 22 April 2021.

    The Conservatives have treated children as an afterthought throughout this pandemic, with had no plan to protect early years providers nor support the families who rely on their vital services.

    Labour wants to see children at the heart of our national recovery.

    Through engagement with parents, providers, children and experts our Bright Future Taskforce will develop a national strategy to ensure every child can recover the learning and social development lost during the pandemic and has the chance to reach their full potential.

  • Kate Green – 2021 Comments on Education Policy Institute’s Report

    Kate Green – 2021 Comments on Education Policy Institute’s Report

    The comments made by Kate Green, the Shadow Secretary of State for Education, on 20 April 2021.

    Boris Johnson has betrayed children by overpromising and under-delivering on catch-up.

    After a decade of neglect of children’s learning, with rising class sizes and increasing child poverty, the Conservatives’ catch-up funding amounts to a measly 43p per child a day. Their inadequate, poorly targeted tutoring programme is leaving thousands without support and they have no plan for children’s wellbeing despite having had months away from their friends.

    Labour would put children at the heart of our national recovery. We need catch-up breakfast clubs and a national strategy to ensure every child recovers from the pandemic and is supported to reach their full potential.

  • Kate Green – 2021 Comments on Mental Health Issues Amongst Children

    Kate Green – 2021 Comments on Mental Health Issues Amongst Children

    The comments made by Kate Green, the Shadow Secretary of State for Education, on 9 April 2021.

    The pressure the Conservatives are putting on children to ‘catch-up’ academically ignores the crucial role mental health and wellbeing play in children’s learning and development.

    The pandemic has exacerbated a decade of Conservative failure, with more families struggling to pay the bills and living in insecure housing, while specialist mental health support has been cut.

    Labour’s Bright Future Taskforce would put wellbeing at the heart of a national strategy to ensure every child recovers from the pandemic and is supported to reach their full potential.

  • Kate Green – 2021 Comments on the National Educational Union’s Report

    Kate Green – 2021 Comments on the National Educational Union’s Report

    The comments made by Kate Green, the Shadow Secretary of State for Education, on 7 April 2021.

    The Government’s chaotic response to this pandemic has exposed inequalities which have been holding children back during a decade of failed Conservative governments.

    Even before the pandemic, the Conservatives oversaw rising poverty rates, with thousands more children arriving at school too hungry to learn and missing out on the creative opportunities we want all children to be able to enjoy. Now they have committed just 43p per child per day to help them recover from the pandemic and delivered a stealth cut to funding to help children on free school meals reach their potential.

    Labour, parents and teachers are calling on the Government to prioritise delivering a world class education for every child, with valued staff supporting them to recover learning and delivering activities that promote wellbeing, rather than half-baked ideas about the length of the school day or term dates.

  • Kate Green – 2021 Comments on School Funding

    Kate Green – 2021 Comments on School Funding

    The comments made by Kate Green, the Shadow Secretary of State for Education, on 2 April 2021.

    The Conservatives’ stealth cut to school budgets shows disregard for children’s futures as we recover from this pandemic.

    The Government’s mishandling of the Covid crisis has kept children out of school, missing out on learning and time with friends, and now they are cutting support that would help children most likely to have struggled with learning over the last year.

    The Conservatives have neglected children through this pandemic and now risk leaving them behind in our recovery.

  • Kate Green – 2021 Speech to the NASUWT Conference

    Kate Green – 2021 Speech to the NASUWT Conference

    The speech made by Kate Green, the Shadow Secretary of State for Education, on 3 April 2021.

    Thank you, Conference, for inviting me to speak today. While I cannot address you from a buzzing conference hall, it is still a huge privilege to be asked to address the members of NASUWT, and to thank you for everything you have done this year.

    Because, as you heard from Keir’s message, we in the Labour Party have nothing but awe and admiration for you, your members, and every single person who has been working with the utmost professionalism in our education system over the past incredibly difficult year, a year like none of us has ever known or could have imagined.

    At a time when in our schools, and in every aspect of our lives, we have faced the most exceptional disruption, you have kept children safe and learning, in the classroom and remotely. Everyone in this country owes you, and your colleagues across our schools, colleges, universities, and childcare providers, enormous thanks for all you have done for children and young people.

    I’d particularly like to offer my personal thanks to Patrick Roach and everyone at NASUWT, for your support since I became Shadow Education Secretary. I hope you agree that in the years ahead there is a huge amount more that we can do together to transform the life chances of children across the whole United Kingdom.

    More to do to build not just an education system, but a society and an economy, that allows every child to enjoy and make the most of their learning and fulfil their potential; that builds and values the professionalism and skill of teachers that is essential to improving life chances; and that ensures that just as every child must be supported in school, no child is held back by poverty outside school.

    That task is pressing. Today I want to speak about how we can tackle gross inequalities which the pandemic has exposed, but were already holding back the life chances of so many children.

    The pandemic did not create, but exacerbated those injustices.

    The children who’ve been struggling to learn remotely because of the Government’s failure to ensure they had all the digital resources they needed to do so – were the very same children who were already struggling to find a quiet space at home where they could do their homework.

    The children who were so badly let down by the shameful food parcels we saw on social media earlier this year – were the same children who have been arriving at the school gate hungry because a decade of stagnant real wages and cuts to social security had left their parents struggling.

    The children who have missed out on the opportunity that being at school could give them to learn a new sport or play a musical instrument or enjoy creating a piece of art – were the children whose families couldn’t ever afford to have the equipment at home that they’d need to do so.

    As teachers you saw all this first hand – not just in the last year, but over the last ten years. It’s not just a pandemic, but a decade of poor decisions, built on a failing ideology, that has let down our children.

    Of course, schools have always worked hard to make up for the disadvantage experienced by the poorest children. And today, if you ask people in this country what’s important for children’s future, they’d say schools must have the funding they need, not be pushed to the point of crisis by meeting the costs of the pandemic.

    They want every child in their classroom, with a world class teacher, a professional who is supported and valued to deliver the very best quality education.

    Teachers who are respected and recognised for their skill and expertise, not forced to take another real terms cut to their salaries.

    But we have to recognise that schools and the professional skill of talented teachers alone cannot fully compensate for the deeply damaging harm done to children by the cruel and devastating effect of child poverty.

    And the Conservatives’ record on this is shameful. In early 2020 – just before our country went into lockdown – there were 4.3 million children growing up in poverty. Three children in every ten children growing up in families that were struggling to pay the bills or put food on the table.

    In an average sized primary school, that’s 86 children.

    In a secondary school, it’s over 300.

    In the last ten years the number of children growing up in poverty increased by almost 700,000.

    There are many reasons why this scandalous poverty matters.

    It’s bad for our country – poverty wastes potential and harms our country’s success and prosperity. More important still, it hurts children, not just in the future, but as they grow up. It harms their health. It damages their sense of self-esteem and wellbeing.

    And its impact on their education is devastating.

    As poverty has risen over the last decade, efforts to close the educational attainment gap have faltered.

    Two years ago, the Education Policy Institute found that the glacial pace of the Conservative government’s action meant it would take 500 years to close the attainment gap at GCSE.

    One year later – even before the pandemic struck – progress had stopped altogether.

    And this is happening not just in England. In Scotland, the SNP prioritise a debate about the constitution over a national scandal that is holding back a generation of children. The First Minister said that she wanted to be judged on her record on education. It is now clear that her record is one of failure.

    Several years and millions of pounds in to the SNP’s attainment challenge and there is still no robust evidence that the attainment gap is closing.

    Young people in the most disadvantaged communities are far less likely to leave school with the qualifications they need, and the pass rate for Scottish Highers had fallen for four consecutive years even before the pandemic.

    After the SNP’s fourteen-years in office, and Nicola Sturgeon’s seven as First Minister, one in four children in Scotland are growing up in poverty.

    In May the people of Scotland can vote to do things differently – by voting for a Scottish Labour Party that would reverse over a decade of SNP incompetence with an education comeback plan to support every child’s learning and wellbeing.

    They can follow the example of the people of Wales, who have elected a Welsh Labour government that has consistently delivered on their priorities.

    Free school breakfasts, the education maintenance allowance, university maintenance grants, the union learning fund. A country committed to investing in the education and skills of all people, from all backgrounds, and at all ages.

    But as for the response of the Westminster government, I see a dismaying lack of ambition for every child and a failure to prioritise their success and wellbeing

    Their headline commitment to funding to support pupils to catch up amounts to just 43 pence per pupil per day.

    And will for many schools be wiped out entirely by changes to pupil premium funding. A stealth cut to school budgets at a time when children need more support than ever.

    No child should be left behind because of the pandemic, nor because of their background, the country they live in, or their family circumstances. We owe every child the best chance to recover their lost learning, and the investment in their education to achieve all that they’re capable of.

    We should never accept less than the best for children who face the greatest challenges, including those with SEND.

    And Conference, I am sure you will have shared my disquiet at this week’s report from the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities.

    The report identifies the progress that has been made in education for some pupils, and I applaud all that has been achieved by teachers, school leaders, students and families. But huge challenges still remain.

    Young people in some ethnic groups are far less likely to get the qualifications they need. They include pupils from white working class backgrounds, from Black Caribbean backgrounds, and GRT pupils, who have some of the worst outcomes in our education system.

    We should never accept anything less than the highest standards for every pupil, whatever their background and circumstances

    But when the link between poverty and low educational attainment is so stark, it is astonishing that the review could look at a country where huge, persistent, embedded ethnic disparities in higher education, in the labour market, and in family income persist – and conclude that there is no structural racism in Britain.

    Of course, it is not just academic attainment, important as that is, that determines a child’s opportunities in life.

    Children’s wellbeing – their physical and mental health – are essential for them to make the most of their childhood and for their life chances.

    Wellbeing is not an alternative to, nor a distraction from, getting children the knowledge and skills that they need; it is an essential condition for it.

    Without the foundation of good health and wellbeing, children will be disadvantaged in their learning, and unable to fulfil their potential. That is why, as we look to children’s recovery from the pandemic and beyond, we must make the wellbeing of all children a priority.

    Because the reality is that the last year has been hugely challenging for all of us, and particularly for our children.

    They have spent most of the year out of school, away from their friends, missing out on opportunities to socialise and develop. As they’re able once again to return to class, to be with friends and teachers, and enjoy time together, we cannot simply accept a return to business as usual.

    Because business as usual wasn’t good enough.

    We must do things differently now. We must work together to forge a new future for our education system. One that secures the life chances of every child, that offers every child the opportunity to reach their full potential.

    Where schools have the resources they need, where staff are supported and valued as professionals, where children grow and develop, gaining not just the knowledge and skills they need for education and work, but the personal development they need to become fully rounded and active members of our society.

    That’s why Labour set up our Bright Future Task Force – to bring together educators and experts to help us generate the ideas that we need not just for children’s recovery in the months ahead, but for a transformed education system we need for future decades.

    A future that none of us can fully predict but one in which we are determined to close the inequalities we have seen widening, not just during the pandemic, but over the last decade. Inequalities that unfairly hold back children and rob them of opportunities. Inequalities that damage our children and damage our country.

    Before I was a Member of Parliament, and before I even thought of being Shadow Education Secretary, I worked to end child poverty, to drive forward the ideas that would make that great ambition a reality for the millions of children who needed it.

    In that time I saw a Labour government deliver a sustained fall in child poverty and a transformation in life chances.

    But the last ten years have seen that progress reverse – progress in closing the attainment gap has ground to a halt, child poverty is rising, and the pandemic has thrown off course the childhood of a generation of young people

    So, offering a secure future to every child, a bright future in which they can make the most of their childhood and fulfil their potential, will be Labour’s defining mission.

    And as we recover from the impact of this pandemic, we recommit to our ambition to tackle child poverty, to end educational inequality, to ensure every child has the chance to fulfil their potential, and that – for every child – Britain will be the best place in the world to grow up in.

  • Kate Green – 2021 Comments on the Pandemic and Young People

    Kate Green – 2021 Comments on the Pandemic and Young People

    The comments made by Kate Green, the Shadow Education Secretary, on 30 March 2021.

    Young people have been the face of the Conservatives’ failure to manage the impacts of the pandemic, with spiralling unemployment hitting under-25s hardest.

    Successive Conservative Governments have hollowed out the infrastructure needed for young people to train and gain new skills after the pandemic, with those from poorest backgrounds worst hit by declining opportunities in further education.

    The Government is failing to live up to its rhetoric on the Kickstart Scheme and apprenticeships incentive which have created just a fraction of the promised opportunities. Ministers’ should heed Labour’s call for a ‘jobs promise’ to guarantee opportunities for the young people who need them, avoiding a lost generation.

  • Kate Green – 2021 Comments on the National Audit Office Report on Children’s Education

    Kate Green – 2021 Comments on the National Audit Office Report on Children’s Education

    The comments made by Kate Green, the Shadow Secretary of State for Education, on 17 March 2021.

    The Government’s slow response to the pandemic means they have failed to protect children from the damaging social and educational impacts at every stage.

    Ministers left thousands of children without the ability to learn, with months of school being missed before the first laptops were distributed to children, and failed to engage to support vulnerable children to attend school acknowledging this put them at increased risk of harm.

    Supporting children should now be at the heart of our national recovery, but the Government’s catch-up tutoring programme was supporting just five in every 1,000 children in February, leaving hundreds of thousands of children without the catch-up support they need.

    The Government has failed children throughout this pandemic. A step change is needed to ensure they are not also left behind in our recovery.

  • Kate Green – 2021 Comments on The Childhood Commission Review

    Kate Green – 2021 Comments on The Childhood Commission Review

    The comments made by Kate Green, the Shadow Secretary of State for Education, on 16 March 2021.

    Over the last decade the Conservatives have overseen record numbers of children being pushed into poverty, a worsening mental health crisis and an 18 month gap in learning between disadvantaged children and their peers at GCSE.

    This picture has to change, yet there was no mention of children in the Chancellor’s Budget and the Government has committed a measly 43p per child per day to support their recovery.

    Labour launched our Bright Future Taskforce last week to help children to recover from the impacts of the pandemic and ensure all children can reach their potential. Alongside the Children’s Commissioner’s ‘Big Ask’ I hope this will deliver a step change for children.