Spending on schools
Fact checks on educational funding, costs per pupil, reported record levels and school meal funding
School funding hasn’t increased by £5k per pupil
The Conservative Party has made incorrect claims about education spending on social media.
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The government’s education funding figures need context
Figures given by the Department for Education about the amount of weekly funding for schools do not give the full picture.
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Some children with no recourse to public funds are eligible for free school meals
A question at PMQs by Labour MP Stephen Timms suggested this wasn’t the case. Free school meal eligibility has been temporarily extended to some of these children.
Read more…State spending isn’t at a record high when you consider the size of the economy
Public spending amounts to around 40% of the size of the economy. It’s been smaller before. It’s also been bigger before.
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Is schools spending going to be at record levels?
Per pupil spending in England is set to increase over the next three years to roughly the level it was at in 2009/10.
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Is £14 billion being spent on education?
By 2022/23 the government aims to spend £4.3 billion more on education, once you account for inflation, than in 2019/20.
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BBC Question Time: Recap and Factcheck
Question Time on 1 November came from Clacton-on-Sea. Topics covered included income tax changes, austerity, early elections, policing priorities, and the impact of the investigation into Arron Banks.
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Government school spending figures: correct but misleading
Spending per pupil in England fell by 8% in real terms from 2009/10 to 2017/18, and will be held constant from 2017/18 to 2019/20. UK education spending was about average …
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Are grammar schools facing a crisis of funding?
English grammar schools received around £700 less state funding per pupil than other state schools in 2016/17.
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Sure Start, school building and tuition fees: the Conservative and Coalition record
Explaining the Coalition and Conservative governments’ record on tuition fees, Education Maintenance Allowance, Sure Start, and school building.
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