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State schools losing out on music tuition as public school music lessons rise

State school music tuition faces a 21 per cent decrease while private schools receive more musical opportunities, BPI survey finds

new survey by UKrecord labels association has exposed the mounting disparity between independent and state school music tuition, with private schools attaining a 7 per cent rise in music provision.

The survey looked at 2200 music teachers across Britain to uncover the findings, which also showed 1 in 4 schools in disadvantaged communities offer no instrument tuitionwhatsoever to kids who want it; and almost 40 per cent of state schools have no compulsory music lessons for 13-14-year-olds. Only 12 per cent of deprived state schools have orchestral groups compared to 85 per cent of private schools.

Recent cuts for local services in England are to result in 36 per cent less funding for 2019-20; which will directly affect music education in state schools. The unjust differences between state and private school education further questions why these cuts should disadvantage deprived children.

“These BPI findings make us profoundly concerned that music education and tuition in state schools is beginning to lag far behind that in the independent sector,” said Geoff Taylor, chief executive at BPI.

This inequality is not just deeply unfair to children in the state sector, it risks depriving our culture of future talents as diverse as Adele, Stormzy and ShekuKanneh-Mason.”

Findings from UCL back in November 2018 showed that British private schools are up to three times wealthier than state schools; and resources for private schoolhave trebled since the 1980s.

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Annual fees for private boarding schools such as Eton, Harrow and Winchester exceed £40,000 and fee-paying day schools cost on average £13,026 a year; meaning private education is predominantly a luxury of the rich.

The Musicians Union reported recently that kids in higher income families were often receiving full price, private instrument lessons but children from low-income backgroundswere mostly learning instruments in school or teaching themselves.

Private music lessons are well beyond the budgets of many low-income families, with more than 40 per cent telling the MUthey simply could not afford tuition – music education at school is for many the only opportunity to learn an instrument.

The BPI has challenged the Government “to inject additional funding for musical instrument tuition in state schools and to recognise music as a core component of a child’s education”

Image: iStock

Words: Anna Whealing

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