MPs celebrate college support staff

UNISON is asking MPs to visit their local colleges tomorrow, 9 February, to celebrate Champions in Our Colleges as part of the ongoing campaign to fully recognise the importance of support staff in education.

On Tuesday, the union held a drop-in event at Westminster, where MPs discussed their local colleges and the funding problems in the sector.

As well as listening to issues which affect the sector nationally, MPs were keen to talk about what they could do to support their local colleges.

There was a particular focus on the apprenticeship system, its importance and how to make it work better – highlighting the benefit, as part of a well-rounded education system, of quality apprenticeships to individuals and to the economy as a whole.

Labour MP Kim Johnson showing support for Champions in Our Colleges

Labour MP Kim Johnson

The event also gave UNISON officers the opportunity to tell MPs of the union’s concerns with pay bargaining in England, the outsourcing of support staff jobs on worse pay and conditions, and poor staffing levels.

The MPs who attended included Ben Bradshaw, George Howarth, Kim Johnson, Justin Madders, Toby Perkins, Virenda Sharma, Liz Twist, Beth Winter, Christian Wakeford and Daniel Zeichner (all Labour), Munira Wilson (Lib Dems) and Chris Stephens (SNP).

Labour MP Daniel Zeichner showing support for Champions in Our Colleges

Labour MP Daniel Zeichner

Champions in Our Colleges celebrates the important role of support staff in colleges and aims to raise awareness of the issues they face.

UNISON encourages all stakeholders, leaders, teachers, other support staff, learners, MPs and the local community to show support staff how much they are valued. The event was run nationally for the first time in February last year.

Labour MP Liz Twist shows her support for Champions in Our Colleges

Labour MP Liz Twist

National officer Leigh Powell said: “It was great to hear from MPs how keen they were to get behind the campaign to recognise the importance of support staff and the importance of the FE and sixth form college sector as a whole.

“We were particularly pleased to be given the opportunity to make MPs aware of the issues around a lack of proper national bargaining (in England) which led to huge differences in funding levels for colleges this year. I’m sure this event will help us make improvements for many staff in the sector, and that’s what we fight for every day.”

Find out more at the campaign webpage

The article MPs celebrate college support staff first appeared on the UNISON National site.

MPs celebrate college support staff

UNISON is asking MPs to visit their local colleges tomorrow, 9 February, to celebrate Champions in Our Colleges as part of the ongoing campaign to fully recognise the importance of support staff in education.

On Tuesday, the union held a drop-in event at Westminster, where MPs discussed their local colleges and the funding problems in the sector.

As well as listening to issues which affect the sector nationally, MPs were keen to talk about what they could do to support their local colleges.

There was a particular focus on the apprenticeship system, its importance and how to make it work better – highlighting the benefit, as part of a well-rounded education system, of quality apprenticeships to individuals and to the economy as a whole.

Labour MP Kim Johnson showing support for Champions in Our Colleges

Labour MP Kim Johnson

The event also gave UNISON officers the opportunity to tell MPs of the union’s concerns with pay bargaining in England, the outsourcing of support staff jobs on worse pay and conditions, and poor staffing levels.

The MPs who attended included Ben Bradshaw, George Howarth, Kim Johnson, Justin Madders, Toby Perkins, Virenda Sharma, Liz Twist, Beth Winter, Christian Wakeford and Daniel Zeichner (all Labour), Munira Wilson (Lib Dems) and Chris Stephens (SNP).

Labour MP Daniel Zeichner showing support for Champions in Our Colleges

Labour MP Daniel Zeichner

Champions in Our Colleges celebrates the important role of support staff in colleges and aims to raise awareness of the issues they face.

UNISON encourages all stakeholders, leaders, teachers, other support staff, learners, MPs and the local community to show support staff how much they are valued. The event was run nationally for the first time in February last year.

Labour MP Liz Twist shows her support for Champions in Our Colleges

Labour MP Liz Twist

National officer Leigh Powell said: “It was great to hear from MPs how keen they were to get behind the campaign to recognise the importance of support staff and the importance of the FE and sixth form college sector as a whole.

“We were particularly pleased to be given the opportunity to make MPs aware of the issues around a lack of proper national bargaining (in England) which led to huge differences in funding levels for colleges this year. I’m sure this event will help us make improvements for many staff in the sector, and that’s what we fight for every day.”

Find out more at the campaign webpage

The article MPs celebrate college support staff first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Cuts since 2010 have cost pupils £5,000 each in lost education

Government cuts to schooling mean a pupil who started school in England in 2010 has lost out on £5,384 of education funding by the time they graduate sixth form this year, according to new research published by UNISON.

Independent analysis, commissioned by the union from economic experts Landman Economics, shows the cumulative effect of Conservative cuts. It shows that, even with the increased money promised for each pupil in the 2022 Autumn Statement, funding remains significantly below 2010 levels.

Between 2010/11 and 2022/23, spending per pupil fell from £7,274 to £6,982 – a drop of 4%. This means many hundreds of pounds less spent on each student every year relative to 2010 funding levels.

The chart below tracks spending on a pupil who started reception in 2009/10 and reached year 13 in 2022/23.

Analysis from Landman Economics – Source: IFS (2022), Figure 5.1 Note: spending for 2020/21 estimated by interpolation between 2019/20 and 2021/22 because actual figures for 2020/21 were distorted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The pressure on school budgets inevitably has consequences for the quality of education being provided. It means larger class sizes, fewer support staff, reduced access to student support services, cuts to the curriculum, cuts to extra-curricular provision and reduced support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) – all of which jeopardise the learning outcomes of millions of children.

In addition to significant cuts to funding per pupil, schools have seen capital spending on school buildings decline by 37% in cash terms and 50% in real terms*. Many buildings contain asbestos as well as materials that were never intended to still be in use, such as the concrete RAAC, leaving children at risk.

UNISON head of education, Mike Short, said: “These figures show the heavy price that young people are paying for a Conservative government.

“It is deeply unfair that today’s cohort of young people will leave school this summer after losing out on thousands of pounds worth of education. They have studied in buildings long past their best before date, with fewer resources to help them learn and less support from staff.

“It’s time for this government to invest in Britain’s future by restoring school funding. The secretary of state for education and the chancellor need to find the money to ensure young people get the best start in life.”

* Cuts in capital funding are from the House of Commons Library report School Buildings and Capital Funding (England), published in January 2023.

The article Cuts since 2010 have cost pupils £5,000 each in lost education first appeared on the UNISON National site.