Students doing a postgraduate course of Initial Teacher Training (such as a PGCE) may be able to get a training bursary on top of Student Loans and grants. This page has details of the additional help available to postgraduate students from England who started in or after September 2006 – and information on the ‘golden hellos’ available to postgraduates who train to teach in certain ‘priority’ subjects.
Postgraduate routes to qualifying as a teacher include:
Unlike other postgraduate students, students doing a postgraduate ITT course can apply for the standard student finance package - the Student Loans and grants usually available only to full-time students doing a first higher education course.
On top of this, there’s additional support available for postgraduate ITT students.
Postgraduate students can apply for a training bursary from the Training and Development Agency for Schools (TDA).
Training bursaries vary between £4,000 (£100 a week) and £9,000 (£225 a week), depending on the subject you train to teach and when you start your course. There’s a supplementary bursary available for students training to teach secondary maths, physics or chemistry through the new extended PGCE.
Training bursaries are tax-free for full-time students. If you’re a part-time student, it may be taxable - this depends on your income.
The TDA training bursary is administered by your training provider (your university, college or SCITT) on behalf of the TDA. You’ll usually apply for the bursary as part of your course induction, but if you have any questions about eligiblity you can contact the teaching information line on 08450 6000 991 - or ask your training provider.
Follow the link below for more about the TDA training bursary.
Postgraduate students who have trained to teach certain subjects at secondary level may be entitled to a one-off taxable bonus called a 'golden hello' once they’ve completed their induction year.
Golden hellos are available to eligible newly-qualified teachers taking up a job in a maintained school or non-maintained special school in England after training to teach in one of the 'priority' secondary school subjects. These are:
Maths and science attract £5,000, and all other priority subjects £2,500.