this post was submitted on 16 Feb 2025
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UK Politics

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Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson sees the provision of free breakfast clubs in all primary schools as vital to breaking what she calls the “unfair link between background and success” in education. Numerous academic studies show that a good breakfast improves attendance and pupil performance.

But with the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, considering further spending cuts for major departments, concerns are growing among headteachers, unions and charities that the plans will not be properly funded and will lack the flexibility required to be successful.

This weekend, the independent publication Schools Week highlighted how some headteachers in primaries, while enthusiastic about the overall aims, were refusing to take part in an “early adopter” pilot scheme for 750 volunteer schools because only 60p was being provided by the government per pupil.
[…]
Guidance sent to schools taking part in the pilots say they will receive a £500 set-up payment to cover equipment and materials as well as £1,099 for “start-up staffing costs” to cover the summer term. A payment will then be made in arrears, based on the number of pupils taking part.

Lindsey MacDonald, CEO of the charity Magic Breakfast, which has more than 20 years of experience in the field and provides breakfasts to more than 300,000 children and young people every day, said ministers must allow schools to offer a variety of ways to feed pupils, rather than just in formal “breakfast clubs” set up in one hall or building, before the normal school day. This is by far the most expensive model as it requires extra staff to be employed out of normal hours, and does not maximise the chances of all pupils being fed.

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[–] sunzu2@thebrainbin.org 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

CEO of the charity Magic Breakfast

Hmmm

[–] bungalowtill@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Any doubts about this charity or this person?

[–] sunzu2@thebrainbin.org 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

The terminology used does not inspire confidence. ****

A lot of US charities are just corruption schemes where state money is transferred to associates of a well connected parasite to be looted.

How is this charity raising money?

Breakfasts are funded through donations from individuals, trusts, our corporate partners and a membership fee from schools.

Call me crazy but when I was a young lad, we had lunch ladies banging out good shit. Everything was done and operated by the school, within the school. Full, proper meals similar to what mom did at home.

Now it seems we need 4-5 middle man to get any basic government function done. I wonder what changed? Does everything need a CEO?

[–] tenebrisnox@feddit.uk 2 points 6 days ago

State schools have been run by grifters at the top for quite some time now. Everything outsourced. My youngest son has a CEO who earns £300k with a chauffeur-driven car (presumably so he can do “high-powered” stuff while being driven between school sites). It’s all normalised (or hypernormalised!)