A report by the committee says funding has not kept pace with the rising demands placed on schools and colleges. MPs say there is a £3.8 billion annual funding gap.
The cross-party committee’s inquiry found that, as well as coping with growing pupil numbers and rising costs, schools were increasingly being asked to cover extra services – such as mental health, social issues and more complex special educational needs and disabilities provision – without adequate resources, putting the sector under significant strain over the past decade.
MPs say there is a £3.8 billion annual funding gap.?The cross-party Education Select Committee’s inquiry found that, as well as coping with growing pupil numbers and rising costs, schools were increasingly being asked to cover extra services – such as mental health, social issues and more complex special educational needs and disabilities provision – without adequate resources, putting the sector under significant strain over the past decade.
The report also criticised the role of advisers used by the Department for Education, which had been uncovered by the Schools Week website, including cost-saving suggestions that schools keep money raised for charity and cut the size of school meals for children.
A report by the Education Select Committee says funding has not kept pace with the rising demands placed on schools and colleges. The report shows that further education has been hardest hit, with post-16 funding per student falling by 16 per cent in real terms over the past decade. MPs urge a £1 billion boost.
Committee chair Robert Halfon MP said, ‘Substantial amounts of money have been allocated to education by the Government, but spending has not kept pace with the growing demands placed on our schools and colleges. Alongside the ten-year plan, the Government needs to cover the 8 per cent funding gap currently faced by schools.
‘There is a crisis of confidence in the ability of mainstream schools to provide adequate SEND support. This needs to be tackled through increased school funding to support better early intervention. The Government must also spend an extra £1 billion to address the projected high needs deficit.’
He also said that there should be automatic enrolment so that all eligible students receive Pupil Premium, and previously unclaimed money should be clawed back from the Treasury to help the most disadvantaged pupils. Pupil Premium should also be extended to 16-19 education.
‘To make sure we are giving schools and colleges the money they need, we are calling for a comprehensive, bottom-up national assessment of the real-world costs of delivering a quality education. A proper ten-year plan and long-term funding settlement would provide stability for schools and colleges and help ensure that our education system is fit for the 21st century.’
‘Millions spent on advisers’
In 2018, the DfE began piloting the use of contracted ‘school resource management advisers’ (SMRAs) who were sent to schools to identify resource efficiencies.
The committee said, ‘We heard disturbing reports that the Department was spending millions on ‘school resource management advisers’ whose cost-saving suggestions included keeping money raised at charity events, cutting children’s food portions, and using spare staff to cover three simultaneous classes in a school dining hall. The Minister said these recommendations had been taken “out of context”. We call on the Department to release the full reports to us, to show the context in which the recommendations were made.
‘In response to this report, the Department should provide us with the full documents described by Schools Week, a breakdown by category of the measures suggested by school resource management advisers across the country, how much the resource advisers cost, and an evaluation of the long-term value for money provided by their cost-saving recommendations.’
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