Pupil Premium


What is the Pupil Premium?

The Pupil Premium was introduced in April 2011 and in 2012–13 individual schools were allocated funding for children from low-income families who were eligible for free school meals, looked after children and those from families with parents in the Armed Forces.

You can view or download our Pupil Premium allocation and find out how this has been used at our school.

Updated: 24/01/2024 335 KB
Updated: 24/01/2024 315 KB


Pupil Premium Progress and Analysis

Sports Premium


What is the Sports Premium? 

Department for Education Vision for the Primary PE and Sport Premium

ALL pupils leaving primary school should be physically literate and with the knowledge, skills and motivation necessary to equip them for a healthy, active lifestyle and lifelong participation in physical activity and sport.

The premium must be used to fund additional and sustainable improvements to the provision of PE and sport to encourage the development of healthy, active lifestyles.


Key Indicators

It is expected that schools will see an improvement against the following 5 key indicators

  1. The engagement of all pupils in regular physical activity – the Chief Medical Officer guidelines recommend that all children and young people aged 5 to 18 engage in at least 60 minutes of physical activity a day, of which 30 minutes should be in school.
  2. The profile of PE and sport being raised across the school as a tool for whole school improvement
  3. Increased confidence, knowledge and skills of all staff in teaching PE and sport
  4. Broader experience of a range of sport and activities offered to all pupils
  5. Increased participation in competitive sport

Sports Premium Allocation

The following plans show how the premium is being allocated in our school:

Sports Premium Allocation

Updated: 24/01/2024 267 KB
Updated: 24/01/2024 269 KB
Updated: 24/01/2024 291 KB
Updated: 24/01/2024 33 KB
Updated: 24/01/2024 255 KB
Updated: 24/01/2024 122 KB
Updated: 24/01/2024 134 KB