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Evaluation of DfE Pupil Premium Plus Post-16 funding for children in care and care leavers

Resources 30 March 2026

Evaluation of DfE Pupil Premium Plus Post-16 funding for children in care and care leavers

Final report

Cordis Bright is delighted to share the final report from our evaluation of the Department for Education’s Pupil Premium Plus Post-16 (PP+ Post-16) programme. The evaluation was conducted in partnership with the Rees Centre, University of Oxford between 2023 and 2025.

PP+ Post-16 was introduced as a pilot in 2021 to address a gap in funding for children looked after (CLA) and care leavers (CLs) at post-16 in England. Since being rolled out in 2023, £10-14 million has been allocated per year. The funding is managed by Virtual School Heads and is intended to improve attendance, retention, attainment and participation in education, employment and training.

Our final report draws on evidence from qualitative data from in-depth case study sites, a national survey of Virtual School Heads, and analysis of secondary administrative data to understand the use of funding and emerging outcomes.

Key findings:

Variation in funding and delivery: Variation in funding levels alongside flexible funding parameters has resulted in differences in the type and level of support available between virtual schools. While this has enabled flexibility to respond to local needs, there is lack of national consistency or comparability of funding use and outcomes.

Direct support to meet young people’s needs: Overall, Virtual Schools are prioritising direct support for young people, with over half of funding allocated to activities such as tuition, equipment, financial support and enrichment. Use of funding is often focused on tailored needs-led support and includes targeted support for CLA and CLs who are not in education, employment or training (NEET) and unaccompanied asylum-seeking children.

Investing in joint working across services: The evaluation highlights the role of the funding in strengthening joint working between education, social care and post-16 providers. Increased post-16 capacity within Virtual Schools has supported improved communication, better understanding of young people’s needs and more coordinated support.

Early signs of positive outcomes for young people: Although the programme is still in its early stages, stakeholders reported emerging signs of improved engagement, retention and participation in post-16 education and training among CLA and CLs. These findings are based on perceptions and early evidence, with longer-term impacts expected to emerge over the coming years.

Ongoing challenges: The evaluation identifies a number of challenges affecting how support is delivered locally including funding levels that are often insufficient to meet need, increasing demand and complexity of need, limited availability of post-16 provision in some areas, and uncertainty around future funding.

Conclusion

Overall, the evaluation finds that PP+ Post-16 is beginning to strengthen support for CLA and CLs and improve collaboration between services at this important transition point in the young people’s lives and in their education, training and employment pathways.

Further clarity on policy intent, consistent and sufficient funding and improved monitoring data will be important to support consistent implementation and evaluate future impact.

Downloads:

Evaluation of DfE Pupil Premium Plus Post-16 funding for children in care and care leavers