I know all that Mollygo. My son's school received PP for him for three years before he was 16. I challenged the school about how the money was spent and, let's face it, it's a reasonable amount of money. The trouble was that he was/is an academically able child who eventually achieved 12 A/A*s (all in academic subjects) at GCSE and didn't fit their stereotype of a PP child. His mother (me) didn't fit the stereotype of what the parent of a PP child is like either! Eventually, I asked to see the school's accounts. Nearly £300,000 had been syphoned off for the special needs department and those pupils without special needs were receiving nothing. Admittedly, they did up their game after that and, at least, published a policy. There was no support for school trips. While money didn't stop my son from achieving academically at GCSE, what people didn't understand is how not being able to afford what nearly every other child could (school trips, music lessons, IT gadgets, the evenings out often arranged by the form tutors, new/unrepaired uniform, revision books, etc) in addition to not having networking contacts for work experience and being bullied for not socialising outside school, affected him emotionally and eventually led to a breakdown before A levels. The school didn't even tell me he was truanting because he was still achieving in line with what they thought a PP pupil should.