In education questions today the government has again been
questioned about a change they have made to pupil premium this
year which has meant children have not received funding they
would normally be entitled to.*
Paul Whiteman, general secretary of school leaders’ union NAHT,
said: “The government is giving with one hand while knowingly
taking away with the other. A significant number of children
appear to have become eligible for help via pupil premium during
the pandemic and these children will now not receive any
additional funding for another whole year. The children who are
losing out are exactly those children most in need of additional
support.
“The government may say ‘no child left behind’, but with this
simple ‘administrative tidy-up’ they have found a way to snatch
back funding from schools and to further entrench educational
disadvantage for the poorest families.
“The government must put this right. They must come clean about
what they have saved and they must put that money back into
schools budgets immediately.”
* Normally schools report the number of pupils they have who are
eligible for pupil premium in January. But for the 20/21 academic
year the government changed the date for this census to October.
This means that any children who became eligible during the
intervening time will not receive any extra funding until next
year.
In a recent survey of NAHT’s school leader members, which
received 1,316 responses, we asked ‘how many pupils in your
school became eligible for pupil premium between the October and
January census, and will therefore not receive pupil premium for
2021?’
62% of respondents had 5 or more pupils that had become eligible
for pupil premium between the October and January census.