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'Government under-spends sixth-form budget by 拢200m'

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Students are losing out on 拢164 of education funding each, the researchers say

The government has under-spent its sixth-form education budget by 拢200m this year, analysis of figures from suggests.

In an answer to Green Party MP Caroline Lucas, Education Minister Anne Milton said the total 2016-17 budget for 16- to 19-year-olds in England was 拢5.9bn.

But the Sixth Form College Association said its analysis of showed only about 拢5.7bn had been spent.

The government says it has tackled unfair funding in post-16 education.

Funding impact

But the Sixth Form College Association says standalone sixth forms still lose out compared with sixth forms that are part of schools.

And leaders of both schools and colleges say they have had to cut courses and reduce student support in response to growing funding pressures.

The researchers say the shortfall amounts to a loss of 拢164 per student over the course of the year.

The association says a in standalone sixth-form colleges in October suggested two-thirds had dropped subject courses as a result of funding cuts and increased costs.

While the Association of School and College Leaders, which represents secondary school head teachers, reports similar difficulties in school sixth forms.

Sixth Form Colleges Association chief executive Bill Watkin said the quality of the education was suffering.

"We urge the Department for Education to ensure that this 拢200m under-spend finds its way to colleges and schools in time for the beginning of the academic year in September," he said.

"Ours is the last budget in the Department for Education that should be under-spent."

And Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and Colleges, said schools were being hit across the board by rising costs "but the situation in post-16 education is even more serious because these pressures come on top of funding cutbacks in the last Parliament".

Ms Lucas, vice-chairwoman of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Sixth Form Colleges, said she found it "hard to understand why 拢200m of the sixth-form education budget has not reached the education front line".

"The government needs to clarify where this money has gone and ensure that it is redirected to school sixth forms and colleges as soon as possible," she said.