Majority of schools looking at redundancies due to funding crisis, largest survey of school leaders shows
Today (Tues 8 Nov), school leaders’ union NAHT releases findings
from the largest survey of school leaders ever taken. The survey,
which received responses from more than 11,000 school leaders in
England, reveals the desperate cuts schools are having to make in
the face of rising costs and government underfunding. The majority
of schools report that they will have to make redundancies next
year: Two thirds (66%) say they will have to make teaching
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Today (Tues 8 Nov), school leaders’ union NAHT releases findings from the largest survey of school leaders ever taken. The survey, which received responses from more than 11,000 school leaders in England, reveals the desperate cuts schools are having to make in the face of rising costs and government underfunding. The majority of schools report that they will have to make redundancies next year:
Paul Whiteman, NAHT general secretary, said: “Schools are being hit by a perfect storm of costs. In attempting to balance their budgets, school leaders are being faced with eye-watering energy bills, spiralling costs to resources and supplies, and the financial impact of an unfunded pay increase this year. With no fat left to cut following a decade of austerity, many thousands of schools are now looking at falling into deficit unless they make swingeing cuts. Education is truly in a perilous state.”
Since most schools are not permitted to operate a deficit budget, they must make significant cuts to remain in the black.
Mr Whiteman continued: “After a decade of austerity, schools have made all the easy savings already. The only things left to cut are things that will have a real immediate impact on children – and especially those who are already the most disadvantaged and vulnerable. This goes against everything school leaders strive for, and the anger and desperation I am hearing from my members is unprecedented. “Schools are finding that they have no option but to make redundancies. A reduction in teaching assistants and teachers will be catastrophic, leading to larger class sizes and less support for children with the greatest needs. This cannot be allowed to happen. “Schools will no longer be able to afford those crucial services that are there to support pupils – things that children rely on not just for education but for their health and wellbeing. Things like in-school mental health services, counselling, and speech and language therapy. And it’s that extra help for families – especially those hit hardest by the cost-of-living crisis – that schools can no longer afford – things like food for breakfast and help with clothing and laundry. “Having refused to fund the proposed post-Covid recovery plan last year, this government is effectively abandoning the most vulnerable children in society a second time by decimating the support schools can offer during a renewed time of crisis. “The responses to this survey represent a significant proportion of the education profession – leaders out there in schools, on the front line, who are seeing the true desperation of the situation at hand. They do not raise the alarm lightly – when they speak, the government must listen. We must see urgent action on education spending ahead of the next Budget update.” Notes to editors NAHT’s survey was taken between 21st September and 14th October. It received more than 11,000 responses from mostly primary school leaders in England. School funding is due to be 3% less in real terms in 2024/25 than it was 15 years before in 2010 (IFS). That equates to a nearly £2billion shortfall (EPI) - £40k for the average primary school (the equivalent of 1 teacher) and £210k in the average secondary school (the equivalent of 4 teachers). The full list of cuts schools are predicting are:
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