HC Deb 02 February 1994 vol 236 cc738-40W
Mr. Don Foster

To ask the Secretary of State for Education how many copies of the secondary school performance tables were published by his Department.

Mr. Robin Squire

A total of 109 separate booklets containing secondary school performance tables were published in November 1993, of which some 1,087,600 copies have so far been distributed.

Mr. Don Foster

To ask the Secretary of State for Education how many copies of the secondary school performance tables were sent to primary schools in each local education authority; what criteria were used in determining how many copies would be sent; and for what purpose the tables were provided.

Mr. Robin Squire

Every primary and middle school in England with 10-year-old pupils on roll was sent 50 copies of the performance tables booklet for their local education authority area. The decision to send a standard number of booklets to each primary and middle school was taken on the grounds of overall economy and efficiency. The tables contain useful information for parents considering which secondary schools would best suit their children, and help parents and others to be better informed about the standards being achieved in schools in their area.

Mr. Don Foster

To ask the Secretary of State for Education what was the budgeted expenditure for(a) publication and (b) distribution of the secondary school performance tables.

Mr. Robin Squire

The total budget for the 1993 performance tables exercise, covering secondary, 16 to 18,

Pupils aged 10(1) in maintained and non-maintained schools in each Local Education Authority in England January 1993
Pupils in non-maintained schools
LEA Pupils in maintained schools primary, middle secondary and special Special Independent All pupils aged 10
Corporation of London 25 0 69 94
Camden 1,315 0 485 1,800
Greenwich 2,611 0 105 2,716
Hackney 2,080 0 283 2,363
Hammersmith and Fulham 1,112 0 152 1,264
Islington 1,837 0 12 1,849
Kensington and Chelsea 767 0 690 1,457
Lambeth 2,387 0 93 2,480
Lewisham 2,569 0 129 2,698
Southwark 2,571 0 211 2,782
Tower Hamlets 2,626 0 14 2,640
Wandsworth 2,014 0 243 2,257
Westminster 1,160 0 335 1,495
Barking and Dagenham 1,836 0 0 1,836
Barnet 3,032 0 385 3,417
Bexley 2,487 0 56 2,543
Brent 2,733 0 212 2,945
Bromley 2,787 1 359 3,147
Croydon 3,395 0 548 3,943
Ealing 2,971 0 466 3,437
Enfield 2,894 0 118 3,012
Haringey 2,211 0 145 2,356
Harrow 2,288 0 231 2,519
Havering 2,686 0 62 2,748
Hillingdon 2,561 1 279 2,841
Hounslow 2,276 0 63 2,339
Kingston upon Thames 1,251 0 223 1,474
Merton 1,617 0 256 1,873
Newham 3,113 0 14 3,127
Redbridge 2,519 0 301 2,820
Richmond upon Thames 1,261 0 455 1,716
Sutton 1,687 0 148 1,835
Waltham Forest 2,542 0 67 2,609
Birmingham 13,527 0 434 13,961
Coventry 3,791 0 146 3,937
Dudley 3,619 0 21 3,640
Sandwell 3,710 0 21 3,731
Solihull 2,484 0 154 2,638
Walsall 3,344 0 62 3,406
Wolverhampton 3,106 0 102 3,208
Knowsley 2,134 0 20 2,154
Liverpool 6,217 10 140 6,367
St. Helens 2,311 0 52 2,363
Sefton 3,497 10 219 3,726
Wirral 4,092 6 246 4,344
Bolton 3,378 3 128 3,509

and national unauthorised absence tables, was £1.9 million. The production of the secondary and 16 to 18 tables has cost £864,800 to date, and the cost of distributing the tables amounts to some £386,100; requests for the tables are still being received. It is not possible to separate the production and distribution costs as between the secondary and the 16 to 18 tables.