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Extended projects worried over cash

Posted: 20 May 2004 | Subscribe Online


Extended schools that are not pathfinders are struggling to survive on inadequate funds.

Jo Shuter, head teacher at Quintin Kynaston, a non-pathfinder extended school in St John's Wood in London, said that the £97,000 her school receives each year to provide extended services "doesn't scratch the surface".

Speaking at a conference last week, Shuter said that without an increase in funding, the school's youth club, which is staffed by teachers and sixth formers trained on-site, would be forced to close.
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"We are also trying to provide an after school club for our [feeder] primary school but we are not given enough money to do it," she said.

She added that, although she was aware that there were other government funds that her school might access such as regeneration funding, she did not have time to look into them. "I'm not a fundraiser, I'm a head teacher," she said.

However, recent research shows that pathfinder extended schools need new funding models to make them sustainable. An evaluation of 25 projects by Newcastle, Manchester and Brighton Universities finds that the Department for Education and Skills' grant of £200,000 for each pathfinder had to be topped up with money from elsewhere.
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"The pursuit of funding was regarded as an unwelcome distraction from the real business of developing extended schools and some projects felt they were having to 'jump through hoops' to sustain good work," it concludes.

- Evaluation of the Extended Schools Pathfinder Projects from www.dfes.gov.uk/research/


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