
The Access Project, which was established in 2008 and currently works in 31 schools, will be available to provide tutoring to more schools in the areas it works in as part of the £76m initiative to support children worst affected by the coronavirus pandemic.
Joining 32 other organisations already announced as tuition partners earlier this month, it will focus its tutoring on schools in London, Birmingham and the Black Country, the East Midlands and Bradford.
Under the tuition partners element of the National Tutoring Programme, schools are able to choose between different providers and a variety of models, including face-to-face and online tutoring. It is estimated that approximately 15,000 tutors will be available through the scheme.
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