- Deprived local areas and schools ‘hit hardest’ by DfE’s
school funding changes - counter to Government commitment
to “level up”
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Added to ongoing SEND delays means most vulnerable children
“face uncertain future”
A PAC report today says the Department for Education (DfE)
“failed to take enough account of the impact of its decisions on
individual schools and their pupils” when it announced changes to
the school funding system, with the adverse impacts falling
“disproportionately on deprived local areas and schools”.
The new national funding formula introduced in 2018-19 has caused
re-distribution of funding from more deprived schools to less
deprived schools: average per-pupil funding has fallen in real
terms by 1.2% for the most deprived fifth of schools but
increased by 2.9% for the least deprived fifth. Changes to the
pupil premium funding also mean schools have lost out on £90
million of funding to support disadvantaged children.
There is a lack of urgency in DfE’s approach to making
improvements to the school system. Delivery of a number of
initiatives has slipped with DfE “unwilling or unable” to commit
to revised timetables. “While the Department drags its feet, more
and more children with special educational needs and disabilities
are progressing through the school system without the support
they need.” The ongoing delays publishing the SEND review
announced two years ago are “unacceptable”.
The Department has committed £3.1 billion to help children and
young people catch up on learning lost due to the disruption
caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, but this funding drops
significantly from 2022-23 and falls well short of the £15
billion that the Government’s own Education Recovery Commissioner
recommended.
In January 2020, there were more than 20,200 mainstream state
schools in England, educating more than 8.1 million pupils aged
four to 19. 58% of these are maintained schools, funded and
overseen by local authorities, the rest are academies,
independent of local authorities, educating 4.4 million pupils.
DfE is responsible for the school system and is
ultimately accountable for securing value for money from the
funding provided for schools. In 2020-21 it provided
mainstream schools with core revenue funding of £43.4
billion.
, Chair of the Public Accounts Committee,
said: “Schools are facing a perfect storm of challenges
with promises of teacher pay rises, per pupil funding changes and
falling rolls but no clear plan from the Department for
Education.
“Schools and pupils in deprived areas are being hit hardest by
the funding formula at a time when the government’s commitment is
to level up. Add to this the ongoing delays in the review of
support for pupils with special educational needs and
disabilities and some of the most vulnerable children are facing
an uncertain future – on top of the impact of Covid. Every part
of government has faced challenges but the impact of the exam
chaos, funding uncertainties and repeatedly delayed decisions is
hitting young people hard and risks scarring their life chances.”
PAC report conclusions and recommendations
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The Department’s continued failure to finalise the SEND
review means children with SEND are still waiting for much
needed improvements in support.In September 2019,
the Department announced a major review of support for children
with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND). In
May 2020, we concluded that many children with
SEND were being failed by the support
system and recommended that the Department
should, as a matter of urgency, complete and publish the
review. In March 2021, the Department told
us that it would publish a Green Paper with its
proposals for change towards the end of June 2021.
However, in July 2021, the Department wrote to tell
us that it needed more time to develop its plans. It says
that it has extended the timetable for the
review in order to ensure that its plans take full account
of the changes caused by the pandemic, and that
it cannot commit to a revised publication date. It
is therefore still not clear how the Department plans
to improve the SEND system and make it more
sustainable, and when practical changes will be made.
Recommendation: The Department should write
to us, within a month of this report being
published, with details of the progress it has made towards
finalising the SEND review and setting out when it now plans
to publish the review.
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Under the national funding formula, schools that are
more deprived have fared worse than those that are less
deprived. In 2018-19, the Department introduced a
national funding formula with the aim of allocating school
funding more transparently, consistently and fairly across the
country. The new formula has made allocations more
transparent and consistent, but it has also led
to a re-balancing of funding away from more deprived schools
towards less deprived schools. Between 2017-18 and 2020-21,
average per-pupil funding fell in real terms by 1.2% for the
most deprived fifth of schools, but increased by 2.9% for the
least deprived fifth. The Department highlights that funding
allocations have been catching up with changes in patterns of
deprivation across the country since the early 2000s. However,
the relative re-distribution of funding is also the result of
the Department introducing minimum per-pupil funding levels,
which have benefited the least deprived schools. In July 2021,
the Department began a consultation on moving to a ‘hard’
national funding formula under which it would set schools’
budgets directly.
Recommendation: Before moving towards a hard national
funding formula, the Department should publish an assessment of
the likely impact of the proposed changes on individual
schools and different types of schools.
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It is not possible to tell whether individual academy
schools are receiving the government’s guaranteed minimum
per-pupil funding levels.In 2018-19, the Department
introduced minimum levels of schools block
per-pupil funding for all schools in England. In January
2020, the Prime Minister guaranteed that every school would
receive minimum funding of £3,750 per primary pupil and £5,000
per secondary pupil in 2020-21. Local authorities are
legally required to ensure that their maintained schools
receive the minimum per-pupil funding levels. By contrast,
multi-academy trusts are allowed to pool funding centrally, and
do not have to provide each of their individual academy schools
with the minimum per-pupil funding. We asked how
parents would know whether their child’s academy
school has received the minimum funding levels. The Department
says that the schools financial benchmarking
website provides a range of data on income and spending for
individual academy schools. However, we note that the
website combines funding from a range of sources,
and does not show specifically the schools block per-pupil
funding that each academy receives.
Recommendation: The Department should publish each
year, starting with the year ending 31 August 2021, details of
the schools block per-pupil funding that each academy
school has received.
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Schools are having to cross-subsidise their sixth forms
with funding intended to support younger
pupils.Between 2014-15 and 2020-21, the balance of
funding shifted from secondary schools to primary
schools. Secondary school funding per
pupil dropped by 3.9% in real terms, while primary
school funding increased by 4.2%. Part of the reason
for this was that the Department reduced funding per
sixth-form student, which fell by 11.4% in real terms. The
Department concedes that it chose to prioritise funding
for children aged 5 to 16. Local authorities have also
protected funding for primary schools. The Department
accepts that 16-to-19 education is facing
challenges, and that some schools cross-subsidise in order
to keep their sixth forms going. It has increased
funding for students aged 16 to 19 in the past two years, in
order to start redressing the balance.
Recommendation: In making and communicating decisions
about school funding, the Department should explicitly consider
how different funding streams interact so that schools do not
have to cross-subsidise, for example, in order to support
sixth-form provision.
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The Department does not seem to have a grip on the
impact of falling rolls on
schools.Most school funding follows the
pupils – under the national funding formula, the
Department allocates nearly three-quarters
of schools block funding on the basis of pupil
numbers. We know of schools whose rolls are falling
due to changes in their local populations. These
schools still have to cover their fixed costs,
but are seeing their funding fall significantly. The
Department highlights that there is a ‘falling rolls
fund’ that local authorities can use to
help schools in this position, and that the
national funding formula provides a lump sum for each
school regardless of size. However, the
Department does not appear to have a strong
understanding of the practical financial impact of falling
rolls on individual schools.
Recommendation: The Department should carry out an
evidence-based assessment of whether there is enough support for
schools whose rolls are falling, and write to us by the
end of March 2022 with an update on the results of its assessment
and what it is doing to address any concerns.
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The Department cannot say when it will
implement its commitment to a starting salary of £30,000 for
new teachers. In September 2019, the
Government set out its intention that salaries for new teachers
would rise to £30,000 by September 2022, in order to
improve the competitiveness of teacher pay. In
February 2021, it told the School Teachers’ Review Body that it
had paused planned pay rises for teachers in 2021/22,
and that starting salaries would not reach £30,000 by
September 2022. The Department says that
it will not be able
to confirm until after the next Spending
Review when its commitment to a starting salary of
£30,000 will be implemented. For several years,
the Department provided separate grants to help schools cover
increases in teachers’ pay costs and higher pension and
national insurance costs. However, from 2021-22, it
is incorporating most of this funding within the dedicated
schools grant, making the funding less transparent.
Recommendation: The Department should set
out a timetable for meeting its commitment to a £30,000 starting
salary for teachers, along with details of how this will be
funded.