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Cost of sending children to state school increases by more than 拢500 in three years

It now costs around 拢2,275 a year to send a child to a secondary state school in the UK, according to a report from charity Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) and the Centre for Research in Social Policy (CRSP).聽

File photo dated 12/09/18 of a teacher and students in a classroom. State schools in England could face "very tight" budgets as rising costs are likely to outstrip the growth in school funding, a report has estimated. School costs could rise by around 3.6% in 2025/26 if the pay review body follows the Government's recommendation for a 2.8% pay award for teachers in 2025, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS). Issue date: Wednesday January 8, 2025.
Image: File picture of students in a classroom. Pic: PA
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The cost of sending children to state school has increased by 拢520 in the last three years, a report has found.聽

It now costs around £2,275 a year to send a child to a secondary state school in the UK, according to a report from charity Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) and the Centre for Research in Social Policy (CRSP).

The cost for primary school has also increased by 16% and now exceeds £1,000 a year.

Similar research in 2022 set the annual cost for a secondary school child at £1,755 and nearly £865 for sending a child to primary school.

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The "significant" increase since 2022 outstripped both inflation and earnings growth during this period, the research suggests.

Some of the key drivers behind the rise are higher costs of food for packed lunches and snacks for the school day as well as an increased need for access to technology for digital learning.

Additionally, the research found a higher cost associated with secondary school pupils having to participate in and supply materials and equipment for subjects like design, on top of costs like textbooks and stationery.

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File photo of students writing in their exercise books. Pic: PA
Image: The cost of materials and stationery contributed to the rise. File pic: PA

CPAG has called on the government to use its upcoming child poverty strategy to improve the living standards for families.

The charity suggests this could be achieved by helping with the cost of the school day, including an expansion of free school meals.

"Parents are struggling to cover household bills while also forking out for pencils and PE gear at school. And still their children get priced out of school activities," Kate Anstey, head of education policy at CPAG, said.

"Help with the cost of the school day - including an expansion of free school meals and cash support with uniform costs in England - would make a huge difference to parents and kids alike."

Ms Anstey said that unless the government's strategy "scraps the two-child limit, more and more children across the UK will see their potential - in and outside the school gates - stunted by poverty".

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Parents said how rising costs impact their child's school experience, with one mother telling the researchers that her son is "always getting detentions for missing equipment".

"My children often feel that they are judged by others and feel left out as they can't afford to take part in other activities and won't ask for stationery items, and often get behaviour points as they don't have the equipment needed," another parent from Wales said.

The report's findings are based on Loughborough University's CRSP, which researched the minimum income standard (MIS) based on what the public believes is needed for a minimum socially acceptable living standard in the UK, including what parents in focus groups said is needed to meet children's minimum educational needs.