Jeff Smith – 2016 Parliamentary Question to the Department for Education
The below Parliamentary question was asked by Jeff Smith on 2016-05-09.
To ask the Secretary of State for Education, how much funding was allocated to schools for supporting children with learning difficulties in (a) Manchester, Withington constituency and (b) Greater Manchester in each of the last three years.
Mr Sam Gyimah
Funding for children and young people with special educational needs (SEN) is allocated to local authorities through the dedicated schools grant, which includes both funding to be delegated to mainstream schools, and funding for the additional costs associated with educating children and young people with high needs.
Schools are funded through a formula set by their local authority, and local authorities are required to delegate funds to a level that enables schools to meet the additional cost of pupils with SEN up to £6,000 per annum. It is for individual schools to decide how they allocate their overall budget to ensure they meet the specific needs of children with learning difficulties.
For those pupils whose additional support costs more than £6,000 the local authority pays top-up funding to the schools from their high needs budget. Top-up funding rates are for local authorities to agree with their schools.
The high needs allocation, within the dedicated schools grant, for the Greater Manchester local authorities in each of the last three years were as set out below:
2013-14 (£million) |
2014-15 (£million) |
2015-16 (£million) |
|
Bolton |
25.83 |
27.15 |
27.55 |
Bury |
22.50 |
24.08 |
24.17 |
Manchester |
59.83 |
63.34 |
64.07 |
Oldham |
23.54 |
24.90 |
25.58 |
Salford |
22.10 |
22.75 |
22.82 |
Stockport |
27.62 |
29.04 |
29.44 |
Tameside |
25.82 |
27.14 |
28.23 |
Trafford |
13.81 |
14.79 |
14.73 |
Wigan |
22.88 |
23.34 |
24.08 |
We do not hold information on the total funding for supporting children with learning difficulties allocated to schools in the Manchester, Withington constituency or in the Greater Manchester area.