![]() |
Esher and Walton Liberal Democrats Covering Claygate, Cobham, the Dittons, Esher, Hersham, Hinchley Wood, East & West Molesey, Oxshott & Stoke D'Abernon, Walton, and Weston Green |
Working for
YOU |
| Esher and Walton Liberal Democrats | <info@esherandwaltonlibdems.org.uk> |
Liberal Democrats announce education funding commitment for Surrey12.00.00am GMT Mon 1st Feb 2010 The Liberal Democrats have announced a major funding commitment to boost education in Surrey. Nick Clegg has this week set out the Liberal Democrat manifesto commitment for a Pupil Premium that would invest around £25million of extra cash in Surrey schools. The money will be invested through the Pupil Premium pledge, part of a £2.5bn manifesto spending commitment. Lionel Blackman Liberal Democrat PPC for Esher and Walton said: "It's nothing short of a scandal that children in Surrey continue to lose out under Labour. "Some of the schools here receive significantly less money than the national average and something must be done. "Under our plans, Surrey schools would get a further £25m which they could use to cut class sizes and provide more individual support. "These plans can be met by savings on education quangos and reducing tax credits. "Improving the education of the nation's disadvantaged children is the best long term solution to many more costly problems ahead." Liberal Democrat Leader Nick Clegg added: "With this unfairness in funding it's no surprise there is such a gap in achievement between children from the poorest backgrounds and those families who are better off. "Only when we get education funding back on track will be able to give all our children the fair start they deserve." ENDS Notes to Editors 1. The Policy in Brief To give every child a fair start, Liberal Democrats will spend an extra £2.5bn on schools. The money will be targeted at schools taking on children who need more help, but will benefit every child in every school. The cash can be used to cut class sizes and provide one-to-one tuition or catch-up classes, ensuring every child gets the individual attention they need. An average primary school could cut class sizes to 20. An average secondary school could see classes of just 16. Why is it Necessary? Performance at school is closely linked to children's background. The poorest children are only half as likely to get five good GCSEs as other children. Too often, the poorest children start school already struggling and fall further behind as they grow older. Schools taking disadvantaged children aren't getting the money they need to cut class sizes and provide them with extra support. The existing methods for distributing deprivation related funding are confusing and inconsistent. Nearly one in three pupils entitled to Free School Meals at secondary school attend relatively affluent secondary schools. Area based targeting therefore misses a large proportion of the poorest pupils - including in many rural areas. As a result, there is a huge gap between poor children in different parts of the country: in Kensington and Chelsea, 59% of poor children get five good GCSEs, while in Rutland, it's 14%. Policy Detail The Pupil Premium would be available to the school which each disadvantaged pupil attended. It would be attached to those children entitled to Free School Meals - the million poorest children. The Pupil Premium would be set nationally and it would top up a national per-pupil base funding figure. It will raise the poorest children's school funding to private school levels, with the average school receiving around £2500 extra for every child entitled to free school meals on their roll. Figures are available for the predicted amount of money each local authority will receive, and can be calculated for individual schools. Costs/Savings This policy costs £2.5bn a year, and will be introduced in the second year of the Parliament after our jobs stimulus package, paid for from savings in Government such as our proposed reforms to tax credits (which will save £1.5bn) and administrative savings in the Department for Education and quangos (which save an additional £1bn). 2. Recent figures obtained by the Liberal Democrats show that: The poorest children are only half as likely as their better-off classmates to get 5 good GCSEs including English and maths Last year one in three children left primary school without being able to read and write properly Nearly 10,000 5-7 year olds are taught in classes so big that they are illegal
Bookmark this story at:
Related News Stories:Thu 27th Nov 2008: Surrey Liberal Democrats Launch New Action Plan. Wed 7th May 2008: Published and promoted by Esher and Walton Liberal Democrats, 9 Harefield, Hinchley Wood, Esher, Surrey, KT10 9TG. The views expressed are those of the party, not of the service provider. |