Formation | 2002 |
---|---|
Founder | Brett Wigdortz |
Type | Company limited by guarantee and Registered Charity |
Registration no. | Company ref 04478840 Charity ref 1098294 |
Focus | Education |
Headquarters | Greenwich, London |
Location |
|
Area served | England and Wales |
Key people | Russell Hobby, CEO[1] |
Revenue | £50.6m (2014)[2] |
Employees | 408 (2014)[2] |
Website | teachfirst.org.uk |
Teach First (also Teach First Cymru) is a social enterprise registered as a charity which aims to address educational disadvantage in England and Wales.[3][4][5] Teach First coordinates an employment-based teaching training programme whereby participants achieve Qualified Teacher Status through the participation in a two-year training programme that involves the completion of a PGDE along with wider leadership skills training and an optional master's degree.[6]
Trainees are placed at participating primary and secondary schools where they commit to stay for the duration of the 2-year training programme. Eligible schools are those where more than half of the pupils come from the poorest 30% of families according to the Income Deprivation Affecting Children Index. Following completion of the two-year programme, participants become Teach First ambassadors. This network of ambassadors aims to address educational disadvantage either in school or in other sectors.
Teach First is the largest recruiter of graduates in the United Kingdom,[7] and was ranked 2nd only to PwC in The Times annual Top 100 Graduate Employers list in 2014 and 2015.[8][9][10]
The Teach First scheme has been met with some controversy and criticism since its inception,[11] which has impeded its planned expansion into Scotland.[12]
In June 2020 Teach First failed to provide places on its programme to 120 trainees due to lack of training opportunities because of COVID-19, sending out a generic email. Some prospective trainees has already given up steady jobs in order to take up placements.[13]
Wigdortz
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