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Plans to boost Welsh Medium education opportunities across Cardiff revealed

8/10/2021
 
A 10-year strategy to boost the number of children and young people learning through the medium of Welsh in Cardiff schools has been revealed by Cardiff Council.

The strategy, designed to help Welsh Government realise its target of having one million Welsh speakers in Wales by 2050, will now go to public consultation before being submitted to Welsh Government for approval in January 2022.

A key target set by Welsh Government is for Cardiff to ensure that 25-29% of Year 1 learners are educated through the medium of Welsh by 2032. Currently 18% of Year 1 leaners are taught through Welsh.  By 2050, across Wales, Welsh Government expects 40% of children to be educated through Welsh and 50% of children educated through English to be able to speak Welsh.

Following discussions with school leaders and other education stakeholders, a draft Welsh in Education Strategic Plan (WESP) 2022-2032 has been prepared by Cardiff Council for public consultation.

Cardiff Council's Cabinet member for Education and Lifelong Learning, Cllr Sarah Merry, said: "The vision for the capital is to develop a bilingual Cardiff where the Welsh language is a vibrant living language. We will seek to do this by increasing Welsh medium education provision sustainably towards the targets set out in Cymraeg 2050. Our plan reflects our ambition that every young person has the opportunity to hear, speak and enjoy Welsh. It is hoped that this will allow young people to fully embrace the language as part of our national fabric and recognise its place at the heart of Cardiff, Wales's capital city."

The strategy, which will run from 2022-2032, includes a number of interventions to boost the language, including:

  • Grow our primary and secondary provision, which supports Welsh Government's target of one million Welsh speakers in Wales by 2050;
  • Supporting current provision and stimulating more demand for Welsh-medium education across the city;
  • Working with partners and the Welsh Education Forum to provide a strong foundation for the Welsh language to grow and thrive within Cardiff.
  • Invigorating the promotion of education opportunities through Welsh (from early years through maintained education and into further and higher education);
  • Working with parents to understand the influencing factors in choosing a school for their child(ren);
  • Continuing to support Immersion provision for latecomers to the language within Cardiff so that Welsh medium education can be explored as an option available to all families;
  • Working to support increased diversity within Welsh-medium - ensuring that all families in Cardiff are aware it is an available choice for their child and see their local school as a reflection of their community and the city;
  • Increasing the number of fluent Welsh speaking teaching and learning staff to support growth and continued commitment to delivering excellent Welsh-medium education and Welsh teaching in Cardiff schools.

 

Cllr Merry, said: "We look forward to engaging with the public on these plans. We want to continue to grow demand for Welsh-medium education and our renewed vision for education and learning in Cardiff makes a clear and unequivocal commitment to provide more Welsh-medium school places. We have already taken great strides forward in this area opening new Welsh medium schools across the city and making more pupil places available in existing schools.

"We are intent on ensuring places are available to all families who choose a Welsh-medium education in Cardiff and we are keen for parents to fully welcome the opportunities that being bilingual in Wales can bring for their children from birth to adulthood. There's little doubt people are becoming more aware of the benefits of a bilingual education, but there is work still to do to ensure each and every family has the knowledge to make a fully informed decision and feel confident to choose Welsh-medium for their children. Our Welsh Immersion Unit has a proven track record for helping families moving into Cardiff or choosing to move from English-medium to Welsh-medium education partway through their child's education journey, but we need tocontinue to work on promoting support which is available for parents whose children are learning through Welsh.

"Finally,we must remain mindful of the needs of all of our current schools as we increase Welsh medium provision. By increasing provision in a strategic way, taking account of current population and birth rate projections - which are predicting an initial fall in pupil numbers up to 2024 - we looking to ensure that all our schools are on a strong financial footing and that all existing Welsh-medium schools remain viable."

In recent years Cardiff Council has built and opened three new Welsh medium schools and increased capacity in many of its established schools.  In the context of reduced intakes to primary education, the Council's existing school-provision projections indicate that these places combined with extra provision already planned, will provide a relatively high level of surplus places in Welsh-medium primary schools city-wide to support sustainable growth in the early stages of the ten-year plan.

Achieving the WESP targets of pupils taught in Welsh-medium schools increasing from 18% in 2021 to 25-29% in 2032 will require increased numbers of Welsh-medium places across Cardiff.  As schools respond positively to the new Curriculum for Wales and respond to the greater desire to speak Welsh, we are confident that English-medium schools will also be keen to build on their growing language skills with schools moving to deliver ever increasing amounts of Welsh taught building the confidence of their pupils to speak and enjoy Welsh in their daily lives.

Cllr Merry said: "Bearing in mind population projections and the likely fall in numbers of pupils entering schools over the next few years we need to think strategically about how we get the best possible use out of all the places which are currently available across the city and the extra places we have planned to come online soon. We have seen positive growth in take up of our Welsh-medium provision over the last 10 years, but we now need to look at innovative ways of encouraging more parents to look at education through Welsh as the best option for their children to become and enjoy the benefits of becoming bilingual in Wales.

"Despite the current population projections, we do haveexpansion plans in place for an increase in the number of Welsh-medium places in primary sector, which will further facilitate an increase of reception age children receiving their education through the medium of Welsh. During the period of this plan, a new school will also open to serve the Plasdŵr housing development. This will be a new model of school for Cardiff, which is derived from successful schools in the Basque Country which helped to grow language take up significantly. This two-form entry school will see one class taught through Welsh with the other class set up as a dual-language (Welsh and English) class. It is hoped that this school will act as an example of good practice which can support other schools to move along the language continuum to eventually provide greater amounts of learning through the medium of Welsh."

The consultation will open on October 15th.
Once concluded a report will come back to Cabinet with recommendations before the strategy is agreed and sent to Welsh Government for approval. To take part in the consultation click herewww.cardiff.gov.uk/WelshStrategyConsultations