Teaching in portacabin village "new normal" at North Yorkshire school
It's the first day of the new term for thousands of pupils
Staff at the North Yorkshire school say it's a huge relief to be back to normal after the major disruption caused by crumbly concrete.
Thousands of students will be returning to class today but for pupils at Scalby in Scarborough being taught in a two storey, 60 unit portacabin village is the new normal.
Jordan Philliskirk is an Assistant Head and says it's an amazing facility but it isn't a permanent solution.
"To be fair, those classrooms are better than the classrooms that we lost due to RAAC. So we've got a much more settled year."
"We've also got confirmation we're going to get a brand new school build in the next three to four years. So we're very excited for that, it's really important that we've got that on the horizon but then also that we've got a settled couple of years coming forward that we can really go on and achieve some fantastic things for our local community and society."
It's as a headteacher's union is calling on the Government to provide "financial protection" for schools at risk of collapse, as well as funding for students to catch up on any "lost learning".
In 2023, schools were told to close any buildings containing Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (Raac) that did not have existing safety measures in place.
Pepe Di'Iasio, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders says affected schools could face fewer enrolments and continued disruption to existing students.
"Even small changes in pupil numbers can have significant implications for school budgets," he said.
"This is a problem decades in the making and something that will be to the financial detriment of the schools affected for years to come."
In February, 234 education establishments in England were identified as having Raac in some areas of their buildings.
The Department for Education previously said that 119 of these schools will have one or more buildings rebuilt or refurbished through the Government's School Rebuilding Programme as works to remove Raac are more extensive or complex.
A further 110 schools and colleges - where works will typically be smaller in scale - will receive a grant to help them remove Raac from their buildings.
A Department for Education spokesperson said: "We have inherited a Ă‚ÂŁ22 billion black hole in the public finances and improving school infrastructure will take time.
"By bringing economic stability and growth, we can fix the foundations of our economy and invest in our public services to rebuild Britain and ensure our schools are fit for the future.
"We know Raac caused disruption to schools and colleges and working closely with them we completed the Raac identification programme earlier this year
"We remain fully focused on work to resolve this problem as quickly as possible, permanently removing Raac either through grant funding or the school rebuilding programme."