This week on the Tes News podcast, the team discuss the scale of the school buildings crisis as the Department for Education and schools wait to hear whether the Treasury will heed pleas for more funding when it makes its annual Autumn Statement on government spending priorities later this month.
The state of the collapse-prone classrooms, some of which are also riddled with asbestos and at risk of flooding, has stayed close to headlines since late August when news of the reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC) crisis broke.
Now, leaders and experts claim that up to £15 billion is needed to fix school buildings once RAAC and inflation are taken into account.
Join Tes news reporters Matilda Martin and Jasmine Norden - plus special guest, academy funding consultant Tim Warneford - as they dive into the detail of the scale of the school buildings crisis facing the sector.
More on the school building crisis
214 schools now confirmed to have RAAC
RAAC: Over 8,000 more schools could be at risk
‘No end in sight’ to RAAC saga, warns union leader
Walker: RAAC cash mustn’t come ‘at expense of SEND’
RAAC: Ministers promise to discuss exam disruption fears
Here’s what else schools need to know this week:
Schools close as Storm Ciarán hits
Children’s commissioner: ‘Benchmark’ schools over absence
Sir Ian Bauckham to take over as Ofqual chief regulator
Covid: Williamson opposed masks in ‘no surrender mode’