The problem with the DCLG guide is that it isn't really suited to schools at all, it's mostly just the Offices & Shops guide with a bit of the assembly guide thrown in and can lead to inappropriate findings...
...The DCLG guides are a nice starting point, aimed at DIY assessments by the RP, but they aren't the be all & end all and are due review.
...I seem to be largely agreeing with you... though perhaps I didn't make this as clear as I could! As I said, I'm no fan of the DCLG guides - most of them were fairly poor at time of publication (in many cases containing large chunks cut-and-pasted out of the then current version of the AD-B), and time hasn't been kind to them; they've gradually declined into being even less useful. Having said all that, they
are the relevant statutory guidance, and if we do ignore them (and their contents) then we ought to be prepared to explain why we know better than those who wrote them. Many of us can, I know - and for this reason it does puzzle me why our government seems to be so happy to continue to publish documents that are so poor, with apparently no thought to maintaining and updating them?
I'd take a slight issue with BB7 - I never quite see what the relevance (to safety risk assessment) of the design guidance that might have existed at the time of construction is - for any premises. I'm sure that those responsible for risk assessing the Tower of London aren't particularly interested in knowing what the building codes were in the 11th Century (slightly daft example, I know, but illustrates a point). I always use whatever the
current guidance is, identify where the premises doesn't comply, and come to a view as to whether those non-compliances can be retained, or whether further risk reduction measures are needed. In 30-odd years in fire risk assessment and design, I've never once felt the need to interrogate historic design guidance, except in a few expert witness cases, for particular contractual reasons or for pure academic interest?