Schools’ Costs

At the beginning of February the DfE published a note to help the School Teachers’ Review Body (the STRB) and other interested parties understand about costs for schools in England at the national level over the period2018-19 to 2019-20. You can read the document at https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/schools-costs-technical-note

Many school leaders and governing bodies will find the DfE’s analysis reads like something created in a parallel universe. Core funding over the two year period the DfE states is to increase at 3.1%, slightly ahead of government predictions of inflation at a predicted 2.9% over the same period. If these percentages turned out to be correct, then schools overall would find budgets under less pressure than expected. However, the DfE’s analysis doesn’t take into account any variations to local government pension schemes rates for employers, as they were not known at the time the technical note was put together. The analysis cannot also prejudge what the STRB will do about pay rates for teachers as a group. Will they hold the line or recognise the recruitment challenges schools in some parts of the country are facing and the system as a whole is facing in trying to entice graduates to train as teachers in some subjects.

The DfE also helpfully comment in their technical note that their high level analysis indicates that if the 25% of schools spending the highest amounts on each category of non-staff expenditure were instead spending at the level of the rest, this would save these schools an aggregate £1 billion that could be spent on improving teaching.

As regular readers of this blog know, TeachVac www.teachvac.co.uk was conceived for this very same reason to offer a free recruitment platform for schools that would create savings from recruitment in order to support expenditure on teaching and learning.  We know that TeachVac is saving schools money now, just as the DfE’s own vacancy scheme will if it ever becomes an effective player in the recruitment market.

By 2019-20 the DfE sees academies as bearing the brunt of the cumulative net pressures as a result of the growth in pupil numbers and the fall in protection payments. The maintained sector will have to cope with the effects of local authorities retaining schools block funding for Education Support Grant (ESG) general rate duties over the three year period.

These figures act as a warning to the remaining maintained schools considering becoming academies. They need to consider the financial situation very carefully in the context of their own situation as well as these national figures to see whether they would be better or worse off.

The fact that the DfE has also apparently written to MATs and MACs where the chief officer earns more than £150,000 asking for a justification of the salary is also interesting. I heard one suggestion, not supported by the person making it, that these high salaries were the price the system paid for school leaders taking on the leadership of failing schools. A more insulting argument to the teachers and other staff working in these schools is difficult to envisage.

Might we perhaps be moving away from basic market economics and back to a negotiated national system of pay and conditions there are many that would welcome the better cost control such discipline would bring back into the system. However, the basic rules of supply and demand will always be difficult to ignore.

 

 

2 thoughts on “Schools’ Costs

  1. When I entered teaching, pay was governed by grades. If a teacher was on a particular grade, then pay was decided within a band. At the same time there was a degree of flexibility – it was down to schools to decide which grade to offer for particular posts. For example, if a school had difficulty recruiting a head of science the school could offer the post at a more attractive grade. Similarly, if a teacher took on an extra responsibility, s/he could be rewarded by going up a grade.
    There was a ceiling within each band so no teacher could be awarded a salary higher than the top of their grade because those running the school thought s/he was ‘worth it’.

    • Janet,

      And it was regulated by the Burnham Committee. We then had a predecessor to the present STRB and for longer than most can recall anything else, the STRB. The other fudge under Burnham was that scale posts were related to the points score of the school and secondary schools had much bigger points scores (more pupils and older) and thus more promoted posts offering a better career path in financial terms than primary schools, but with the overall impression of equal pay across the teaching force. LMS broke the mold and probalby created more opportunities for higher pay in the primary sector, at least for a while.

      The real fun in the pay stakes started will the introduction of un-defined executive heads about 15 years ago and the big hike for many leading more than one school. The headteacher associations did a great job for their members, but for the education sector as a whole?

      John

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