Get the best experience in our app
Enjoy offline reading, category favourites, and instant updates - right from your pocket.

Labour pledges 5% for teachers and £10.5bn for schools

Labour manifesto also promises to abolish Ofsted, scrap Sats, and to get advice on ‘integrating’ private schools with the state sector
21st November 2019, 12:57pm

Share

Labour pledges 5% for teachers and £10.5bn for schools

/magazine/archive/labour-pledges-5-teachers-and-ps105bn-schools
Labour Manifesto

Teachers would receive a5 per cent pay rise if a Labour government was elected, the party revealed today.

Its general electionmanifestocommits to reversingcuts to public sector pay by givingabove-inflation pay rises starting with a 5 per centincrease by hiking taxesfor those earning more than £80,000 and freezing themfor everyoneelse.


ɲ:Lib Dems pledge 20,000 more teachers and an extra £10bn

Green Party: Extra £4 billion a year for schoolspledged

ɲ:Election 2019: Tories hope to cash inon school funding


“Labour will restore public sector pay to at leastpre-financial crisis levels (in real terms), by delivering year-on-yearabove-inflation pay rises, starting with a 5 per cent increase, to reward andretain the people who do so much for us all,” the document states.

It also pledges an extra£6 billion in funding for schools in2019-20, with another£2.3 billion for2021-22 and £2.2billion for 2022-23.

Responding to the Conservatives’ double andtriple counting of their school funding pledge, Labour uses the same trick, stating: “This gives a cash uplift compared with 2019-20 funding levels of £25 billion over the following three years, corresponding to the period of the government’s announced £14 billion.”

The manifesto says the extra funding will “ensure pupils are taught by a qualified teacher, that every school is open for a full five days a week, and maximum class sizes of 30 for all primary school children”.

‘Integrating private schools’

Labour stops short of following through on its conference vote by pledging abolish private schools. Instead the manifesto says the Social Justice Commission would be asked to advise on “integrating private schools and creating a comprehensive education system”.

The partywould also“close tax loopholes enjoyed by elite private schools and use that moneyto improve the lives of all children”.

Decision-making powers

On free schools and academies, it says the centrally funded state schools would be brought“back under the control of the people who know best:parents, teachers and local communities”.

“Budget and day-to-day decisionswill be transferred back to schools, overseen by an accountable governing body withelected representatives,” it adds.

Andthe responsibility for delivering education for young people “will sitwith local authorities”, the manifesto says.

Accountability and curriculum

Ofsted would be replaced and inspections would be transferred to a newbody “designed to drive school improvement”.

Labour is pledgingto “end the ‘high stakes’ testing culture of schoolsby scrapping key stage 1 and 2 Satsand baseline assessments, and refocusing assessment on supporting pupil progress”.

The curriculum would be reviewed“to ensure that it enriches students and covers subjects such as black history and continues to teach issues like the Holocaust”.

“Pupils will learn both the science of climate and environmental emergency, and the skills necessary to deal with them,” the manifesto says.

Other Labourpromises for schools

• Taking “action to end ‘off-rolling’, removing the perverse incentives for schools to let pupils fall out of the system, by making schools accountable for the outcomes of pupils who leave their rolls”.

• “Poverty-proofing”schools, withfree school meals for all primary school children, “encouraging breakfast clubs, and tackling the cost of school uniforms”.

• Funding more non-contact time for teachers to prepare and plan.

• Providing“the necessary funding for children with special educational needs and disabilities”.

• An Arts Pupil Premium to fund arts education for every primary school child.

• A continuous, peer-to-peer school improvement modelled on the London Challenge.

• A new teacher supply service to “tackle the waste of funds going to private supply teacher agencies”.

• Bringing back the School Support Staff Negotiating Body and national pay settlements for teachers.

Want to keep reading for free?

Register with Tes and you can read five free articles every month, plus you'll have access to our range of award-winning newsletters.

Register with Tes and you can read five free articles every month, plus you'll have access to our range of award-winning newsletters.

Keep reading for just £4.90 per month

/per month for 12 months

You've reached your limit of free articles this month. Subscribe for £4.90 per month for three months and get:

  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters

You've reached your limit of free articles this month. Subscribe for £4.90 per month for three months and get:

  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters
Recent
Most read
Most shared