Report shows fee paying schools have extra eight million for student spend

A new report for the Department of Education says the country’s private fee-paying schools have more than eight million euro a year extra to spend on their students.

It also says that the cost of all fifty-five fee-paying schools entering the free scheme would be 23.5 million euro – a lot less than previous estimates.
The 55 private fee paying schools in the country raise about 120 million a year by charging students for their education.

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After discounts and loan repayments they’ve 81 million left so they can pay for extra teachers, sports coaches and for buildings such as gyms and sports halls.

The taxpayer forks out 100 million for the salaries of teachers – the Bord Snip Nua report recommended cutting taxpayer funding by paying for less teachers – and the department report says if this was done the 55 schools would still have over 61 million in discretionary spending.

And the report says if all the fee-paying schools were to ditch fees and enter the free system the extra cost to the taxpayer would be 23.5 million – much less than previous claims of more than 100 million.

However the body that represents the 55 private schools around the country says the cost to the state of educating a child in a fee paying school is almost half that of a free school.

The Joint Managerial Body says this is a significant saving to the state.

In a statement this morning Ferdia Kelly General Secretary of the JMB says if the parents of the 26,000 young people in private school, transferred their children to Free schools, the state will incur the costs of the teachers’ salaries, the capital costs for buildings, and capitation grants for the running of the school.

He says a core principle of the Irish education system is the right of parental choice and  fee-paying schools are part of the exercise of that choice.