MILLIONS of pounds are being invested to help ‘build relationships and change the system’ ensuring the country’s most vulnerable young people can maximise their learning.

Around 400 delegates attending the annual conference of the National Association of Virtual School Heads (NAVSH) in Manchester heard that £24m was being provided by the Department for Education for 16-19 year olds in care.

Virtual Schools will also receive £16.6m over the next two years for younger children who are looked after or have a social worker.

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Minister for Children Claire Coutinho told the conference: “Taken together, the significant amount of funding and proposed expansion of your role shows just how important the work you all do day-in day-out is – and the huge achievements you have made in supporting some of our most vulnerable children to succeed in their education.”

Ten million pounds will be distributed to all local authorities in the country next year and £14m the year after for 16-19 provision.

NAVSH chair Julie Bunn, of Guisborough, who handed over her position to her deputy Matthew Cooke, said: “This really is around building relationships and enabling system change, which is the theme of our conference.

"We are the jam, the connector which sticks these two beasts of care and education together. We make the impossible possible and it’s a tough job.

“We get key people to the table but we can’t fix everything, which is where system change comes in. We need to see education as protection and care plans looking at the educational trajectory of the child. We want to encourage our schools to change from challenging behaviour to building relationships.”

Virtual School Heads were established in 2014 to oversee positive educational progress for the most vulnerable and disadvantaged children.

The role to promote the educational achievement of all children with a social worker was then given to Virtual School headteachers trebling the workload.

Funding was also extended to the Broadening Educational Pathways scheme, managed for DfE by the Royal National Children’s SpringBoard Foundation, which allows looked after children to attend independent schools. “For these children this is life-changing,” Mrs Bunn said.

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The conference, at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, also heard, via a live link, from Children’s Commissioner Dame Rachel de Souza who said the work of virtual heads was ‘immensely important”.

“I feel a personal responsibility for the safety and wellbeing of these children” she said. “I am tasked with bringing the voices of children to the heart of Government and I need your help to do that."

She said 80,000 children were in care and 20,000 were separated from their siblings so she wanted to see greater emphasis on them being kept together or at least having contact.