(Chatham and Aylesford)
  (Con):... The challenge is, how does sport fit into the school
  day, and how is it funded? I hope the Minister can deal with the
  latter point today and pledge to confirm the funding for school
  sport for the next academic year at the earliest opportunity. If
  we want decent provision, it is essential that it is planned well
  in advance. Our children need activities that give them a thirst
  for movement. They want and need variety that is not always about
  competition. Planned expenditure is vital for this and, in turn,
  will enable school day planning. I share the Youth Sport
  Trust’s view that PE should be a core subject, but also
  that wraparound care could be more active. We often cite the
  difference between state and private provision. Facilities is
  obviously a point of difference, but so is the type of
  after-school offering. This has to be funded, so let us fund it.
  It is not misspent public money, for it will save the taxpayer in
  the long run by mitigating the poor physical and mental health
  that costs the NHS so much...
  The Minister of State, Department for Education ():...The DFE school workforce
  census data for the 2021-22 academic year indicates that PE and
  sport account for around 8% of all teaching hours in secondary
  state-funded schools. A rather old 2015 Youth
  Sport Trust survey found that the average number of
  minutes of PE per week in state secondary schools was just under
  two hours, at 118 minutes for key stage 3 and 114 minutes for key
  stage 4...
  To read the whole debate, CLICK HERE