Department for Education
The Department for Education (DfE) is a department of the UK government responsible for issues affecting people in England up to the age of 19, including child protection and education. DfE is directly responsible for state schools in England.
- Updated 2 years ago
Children Who Became or Were Subject to a Child Protection Plan (CPP), Borough
Department for EducationChildren and young people who became or were subject of a Child Protection Plan (CPP). Where a child was made the subject of a child protection plan more than once in the year within the same authority, each occasion has been counted. Rates per 10,000 under 18. Includes unborn children. See more on the DfE website. - Updated 5 years ago
Children Looked After, Borough
Department for EducationLooked after children in England for the year ending 31 March. Numbers and rates per 10,000 children aged under 18 years. Figures exclude children looked after under an agreed series of short-term placements. Historical data may differ from older publications. This is mainly due to the implementation of amendments and corrections sent by some local authorities after the publication date of previous materials. Further DFE children in... - Updated 10 years ago
Physically Active Children, Borough
Department for EducationPercentage of school children who spend a minimum of two hours each week on high quality Physical Education and school sport within and beyond the curriculum. There is the potential for error in the collection, collation and interpretation of the data (bias may be introduced due to poor response rates and selective opt out of larger children which it is not possible to control for). TNS Social Research: Annual Survey of School S... - Updated 14 years ago
Physically Active Children
Department for EducationPercentage of school children who spend a minimum of two hours each week on high quality PE and school sport within and beyond the curriculum. There is the potential for error in the collection, collation and interpretation of the data (bias may be introduced due to poor response rates and selective opt out of larger children which it is not possible to control for). The percentage of children attending state schools belonging to a Sc...