Parents painting and fundraising to support schools

Two adults and three children are all painting the same wall in a school corridor. Colourful coat hooks are in the middle of the wall and small wooden benches can be seen on the left.
Image caption,

PTA chair Louise Shore (third from left) and head teacher Will Reeves painted their school with help from pupils

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"In an ideal world, you always want a little bit more... we've just tried to make the best of the situation we're in."

As term-time approaches, head teacher Will Reeves has just finished painting a battered-looking corridor at Cropredy Primary School near Banbury, Oxfordshire.

He says tight budgets have led to him - along with help from parents from the school's PTA - turning his hand to DIY over the summer to improve the school's worn buildings.

The Department for Education said Oxfordshire would receiving £549.6m for mainstream schools in 2025-26 – an increase of £11.7m on the previous year.

A close-up of a blue school corridor carpet with a large water damage stain emerging from the bottom of a door. The wall nearby also shows signs of water damage, and a fire extinguisher is visible in the corner.
Image caption,

Head teacher Will Reeves described parts of the school as "worse for wear"

Cropredy C of E Primary School was previously run by Oxfordshire County Council, but was taken over by the EPA Trust in January 2024.

Mr Reeves joined the school the following May.

He says the trust is "incredibly supportive" and able to fund major projects like the rebuilding of the school's crumbling early years buildings.

But smaller projects, such as "cleaning gutters and fixing ceilings" are taken on by the school's community.

In January, the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said costs would outpace funding for schools in 2025-26.

Its report warned that costs were likely to rise by 3.6%, leaving some schools facing tough choices.

Louise Shore sits and smiles for the camera. She is wearing a large pink short with red stripes and has long straight blond hair. In the background a man and child can be seen painting a while wall.
Image caption,

Louise Shore, chair of Cropredy C of E Primary School, said the school had seen "positive changes" over the past year

Joining Mr Reeves is Louise Shore, chair of its Parent Teacher Association (PTA), who has brought her two daughters who attend the school.

She says the school's need for change has led to better links with its community.

"It's nice to be able to get everyone together to help improve the school, with its something like painting, or fundraising," she says.

"In an ideal world, you would think this isn't how a school should operate. But at the same time it helps bring the school closer together."

Meanwhile, the chair of the PTA at Crowmarsh Gifford Primary School in Wallingford, Clare Walker, has set up a fundraising page for new laptops.

The school currently has 15 laptops for just over 200 children and would like enough for a single class to have one each.

Ms Walker says sufficient access to laptops is "fundamental" to the children's education.

"We feel if we [as parents] can contribute to children's environment, as well as their education, it's really important we're able to do so," she says.

Primary schools 'particularly challenged'

An Oxfordshire County Council spokesperson said the school condition allocation (SCA) from central government was intended for "reactive maintenance" to ensure schools remained open.

"As the allocation is on an annual basis, it is difficult to have an ongoing planned maintenance programme for our schools," they said.

"This often leaves schools looking at their own resources for any ongoing maintenance such as painting, IT refresh, furniture, and minor adaptations.

"Primary schools are also particularly challenged currently due to falling birth rates, which for some schools mean a year-on-year reduction in their budget due to fewer pupils applying for a place".

In a statement, a Department for Education spokesperson said: "We are investing almost £3 billion per year by 2034-35 to improve the condition of school buildings, on top of the almost £20 billion for the School Rebuilding Programme, delivering rebuilding projects at over 750 schools across England."

"Alongside this, we are putting a further £3.7bn into schools' budgets and increasing pupil premium to over £3 billion for 2025-26 to provide additional support for those children that need it most, so every child can achieve and thrive."

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