- My Account
- Logout
- Register
- Login
English is the foreign language for 40% of primary school pupils
Related Articles
26 November 2007
Forty per cent of primary age children in London now speak a language other than English at home and some schools take several new arrivals a week as pupils "appear from nowhere", heads have said.
The National Association of Head Teachers called for schools to be given the "infrastructure" they needed to get pupils whose first language is not English fluent enough to cope with the national curriculum as soon as possible.
Scroll down for more...
Forty per cent of primary age children in London now speak a language other than English at home
The NAHT warned that the Government's Ethnic Minority Achievement Grant, which is doled out by Whitehall to town halls to allocate among schools according to need, was failing to cover the cost of English as an Additional Language teachers.
NAHT leader Mick Brookes said: "These children are welcome in our schools but we need the capacity to look after them properly."
Latest government figures show that the capital's primary schools alone took in more than 197,000 children for whom English is not their first language this year, up from just over 190,000 last year.
Secondary schools' proportion of non-native English speakers rose from 33.5 per cent to 35.3 per cent.
Most are concentrated in inner London - in Tower Hamlets, three quarters of children in primary schools are now not native English speakers.
Ofsted research has shown that primary schools typically spent their EMAG on a single EAL teacher, supported by a classroom assistant.
But Ofsted also found that primary schools with a track record of successfully integrating EAL pupils were forced to find thousands of pounds more from their general budgets. Most had suffered cuts in their EMAG grants.
"Schools were pessimistic about being able to sustain the excellent work they had built up over the years if funding continued to decline," said Ofsted.
Clarissa Williams, head of Tolworth Girls' School in Kingston, said she got £1,300 from the Government to teach English to foreign pupils, and topped that up with another £30,000.
"These children just turn up on your doorstep and it places a significant additional strain on budgets," she said.
A spokesman for the Department for Children, Schools and Families insisted the EMAG was keeping up with demand, saying it was going up from £178.6million this year to £206.6million in 2010-11.
Comments
Top stories in News
Top stories in News
-
No end to Tube nightmare as commuters warned of MORE chaos tonight
-
Double dip recession is worse than feared as UK faces ‘hurricane’
-
They attacked "like a pack" raining fists on a defenceless legal secretary. Yesterday they walked free from court. No wonder their victim says she has been denied justice.
-
Mayor demands report from Transport for London into Jubilee Line nightmare that left hundreds of commuters trapped for hours underground
-
David Cameron: I don’t regret giving Jeremy Hunt BSkyB role
The O2
Check out the cool stuff happening under our tent such as the hottest gigs, comedy, sport, films, clubs, bars, restaurants and much more.
Can you imagine a career in teaching?
Be inspired to teach - let real teachers show you how rewarding the job can be.
Playing a game-changing role during the Games
Cisco is providing the solutions for London 2012's complex IT needs.
Win a Silverstone track day with Zantac 75
Feel the burn of a different kind - 20 Silverstone motoring experiences to be won
Reader Offers email A fantastic selection of
offers, giveaways and
promotions.
TV Baftas - in pictures
Video: South east London factory fire - 'Air raid siren' wakes Greenwich residents
London to see thunderstorms after heatwave
Baroness Warsi: 'My expenses claims were legal and in spirit of the rules'
News pictures of the day
Man v Woman v Food: the big burger challenge
New kids from the Bloc: new wave of Russians settling in London
London drug dealer pictured himself with bags of cannabis and wearing crown of £20 notes
BarChick: Janet's Bar