Severe cuts leave schools in crisis.
Thousands of school buildings are in an unfit condition to be used to
teach pupils, with many schools being
forced to lay buckets out to catch the rain falling from leaks in the ceiling
or teach their pupils in "temporary classrooms" dating from the
1950s.
A survey of
nearly 700 head-teachers revealed that four out of 10 believe their buildings
are not "fit for purpose" to cope with the demands of providing
education in the 21st century. Its findings coincide with massive cuts in the
capital spending budget for schools. This year nearly 500 fewer schools will be
refurbished than under the previous Labour government's Building Schools for
the Future (BSF) programme – 252 instead of 735.
The axing of the £55bn BSF programme, which would have seen every
secondary school either rebuilt or refurbished over time, was one of the first
victims of the Coalition's cuts. The Education Secretary Michael Gove replaced
it with the priority school building programme (PSBP), which will this year see
a total of 261 schools either rebuilt or refurbished and the east of England
has feared worst with a cut of nearly 80% in the number of schools being given
a facelift following the removal of BSF programme.
At Forest Lodge primary school in Leicester, pupils are still being
taught in temporary buildings put up in the 1950s. The school had been given
top priority for rebuilding under the BSF programme - but have since been
overtaken by another school overtook them and subsequently they were squeezed
out of the repair programme.
"We have a flat roof over most of the school," said Karen
Cane, its head. "There are constant leaks. We had an adviser come in to
monitor classroom observation and it was raining and water was dropping onto
one child's work." The school has been given the green light for
rebuilding under the Coalition's priority programme – but it could take between
two and five years to complete the work.
At St Andrew's Church of England school, a 196-pupil primary in
Warrington, Cheshire, buckets still have to be put out to catch the falling
drops every time it rains. "The roof was failing massively when it rained
and we had water dropping through on to the floor," said Keith Cahillane,
its head. "I didn't think it was a proper situation for children to be
learning in or staff to be teaching in."
Of 687 head-teachers questioned in a survey for The Key, an independent
advice service for schools, 270 said their buildings were not "fit for
purpose". They added that they had suffered cuts of up to 75 per cent in
their capital spending programmes for buildings and maintenance.
The head-teacher survey was done before the Government announced the
PSBP – but the majority of schools who put in for funding through it were
turned down. In a ministerial statement, Mr Gove acknowledged: "I
recognise that many of the schools that applied to the PSBP and have been
unsuccessful [there were 326] will also have significant condition needs.
"I know that many schools will be disappointed not to be included
in the programme. We have had to take difficult decisions in order to target
spending on those school s that are in the worst condition."
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