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A school visited by the PM is set to miss out on a staggering £359.9K by 2020 under the Tories' cruel education cuts.

Theresa May was pictured meeting excited pupils at Dunraven School in Streatham South London this morning.

The school, where model Naomi Campbell studied, shared photos of the visit from their VIP guest with the caption: "Delighted that potential future Prime Ministers met the current one this morning."

But the Academy, which caters for pupils aged 11-18, looks set to lose £277 per pupil under the government's proposed changes to the schools funding formula.

The amount is worked out based on projections of pupil numbers.

Unions believe that would translate into a loss of six teachers for the school which was rated 'outstanding' in every category at its last Ofsted inspection in 2014.

Ahead of the election the school tweeted about their concerns around the changes to funding saying: "Concerning info in @tes this week re school funding. Local councillors & MPs must hear this. Our children deserve better treatment."

In March the government revealed it was proposing changes to the schools funding formula which would result in an average loss of £74,000 per primary and £291,000 per secondary school.

Unions, parents, teachers, heads and support staff mounted a huge campaign against the cuts including putting huge pressure on their MPs during the general election campaign and backed by the Labour Party .

As a result of the campaign, the Government has found £1.3bn over the next two years from other parts of the Department for Education’s budget.

But education unions say the extra money nowhere near enough to reverse the £2.8bn in cuts that schools have suffered since 2015.

Despite the changes 88% of schools are still facing real-terms budget cuts per pupil between 2015/16 and 2019/20 which works out as a loss of £52,546 per year for the average primary school and £178,321 per year for the average secondary school.

Kevin Courtney, Joint General Secretary, National Education Union said: “Theresa May would be hard-pressed to visit a school that isn’t suffering from funding cuts. £2.8bn has been cut from school budgets since 2015 resulting in increased class sizes, cuts to school staff and a reduced curriculum.

(Image: Matt Cardy)

"All schools must have sufficient money to run an effective education system that gives children and young people the best start in life. This isn’t happening.

" The General Election sent a loud and clear message to the Conservatives that the public want our schools to be properly funded.

"The National Education Union will continue to put pressure on Government to ensure our children get the education they deserve.”

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