Cost of living a 'serious threat' to school trips - English Heritage
English HeritageThe cost of living is posing a "serious threat" to school trips, English Heritage says.
The charity, which provides free school visits, says trips to its sites have dropped by 28% compared to numbers before the Covid pandemic.
It said the cost of these trips had increased by 63% in three years.
"For many children, a school outing is the only chance they get to discover the very places where history was made," a spokesperson said.
Dr Dominique Bouchard - the charity's head of learning and interpretation - added: "It is becoming increasingly difficult for the charity to absorb these costs.
"Learning about the Battle of Hastings in a classroom can never offer the same depth of understanding as visiting the actual battlefield, seeing the landscape and even recreating the fight."
Jim Holden/English HeritageThe charity believes the reduction in visits is down to cost of living problems, rather than the effects of the pandemic.
It said the cost of a trip per pupil had gone from £2.25 to £3.66, with this projected to rise to £3.89 over the next year.
English Heritage is now fundraising to help it offer more free visits.
The charity - which has its headquarters in Swindon - has also released figures showing regional differences in how many school trips are happening.
For example, the organisation's sites in the south-east of England are the most visited, with an average of almost eight times the number of schoolchildren compared to those in the north-west of the country.
Around 83% of visits to the charity's sites are free for schools, with the rest of trips costing schools £100-£200.

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