SCHOOLS in England need up to £15 billion in extra funding if children are to catch up on learning missed through Covid-19, according to a leading education think tank.
The government has made £1.7 billion in catch-up funding available, but analysis by the Educational Policy Institute published today says that up to 10 times that sum needs to be invested over the next three years.
Without “massive policy interventions,” there could be severe consequences for young people’s education, earnings and life chances, it says, with individual lifetime earnings losses of between £8,000 and £50,000 — between £60 billion and £420bn across England’s eight million pupils.
With 170,000 children living in poverty in north-east England and teachers leaving in droves over 20 per cent real-terms pay cuts since 2010, all while private companies siphon off billions, it is time to unite and fight for education, writes MATT WRACK
NICOLA SARAH HAWKINS explains how an under-regulated introduction of AI into education is already exacerbating inequalities


