CREDIT: This story was first seen on BBC News
There have been more than 27,000 tweets using the hashtag #whatwouldyoucut since ASCL’s campaign against cuts to school budgets started on Sunday, March 5, BBC News reports.
The government insists school investment is at a record £40bn. But the Association of School and College Leaders said this was only because pupil numbers are rising.
It argued that headteachers are having to make tough decisions about which services to cut. The tweets included photographs of science experiments, school trips, sporting activities and performing arts events.
Lostock Hall Primary School in Stockport suggested its library could be a candidate for the chop.
The idea for #whatwouldyoucut came from a group head teachers in Cheshire East – one of the country’s worst-funded areas in the country, which is set to loose out even more under the government’s planned new funding formula.
ASCL interim general secretary Malcolm Trobe said: “This campaign shows what is at stake as a result of the education funding crisis. School leaders have to reduce their budgets significantly.
“Smaller budgets mean fewer staff and this impacts on every area of school activity. What would you cut? School concerts? Educational trips? GCSE courses? Mental health support? Sports events?”
Schools have been writing to parents warning them of tricky budget decisions to come, while groups of heads have been lobbying the Education Secretary setting out their difficulties.
The Department for Education said it was protecting per pupil funding so where pupil numbers rise, the amount of money schools receive will increase.
“The government has protected the core schools budget in real terms since 2010, but the system for distributing that funding across the country is unfair, opaque and outdated.”
This was why it was bringing forward a new national funding formula, under which half of England’s schools will receive a cash boost in 2018-19, it added.
The Twitter campaign comes in the run-up to the budget on Wednesday March 8.
Currently, the level of funding per pupil is frozen and is expected to fall by 6.5% in real terms between 2015-16 and 2019-20 because of rising costs.
These funding pressures include increases to employer contributions to National Insurance and pensions, nationally agreed pay awards, and the new Apprenticeship Levy which comes into force next month and which many schools will have to pay.
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