Loughborough Echo

Grammar schools might create elitism in teen girls

- DAVID GODSALL david.godsall@reachplc.com

A STUDY has revealed that grammar schools may create a sense of hierarchy and elitism among teenage girls.

Researcher­s at Loughborou­gh University found that some girls in an elite non fee-paying grammar school viewed poverty as a moral failing and associated it with belonging to other groups and pupils at other schools.

As part of the study, students aged 13-14 were interviewe­d at a UK grammar school to examine how they understand and perceive class, gender, ethnicity, race and religion.

Researcher­s argue that girls in these schools are likely to transition to top universiti­es and go on to hold powerful positions in the future – but there has been little research into these elite spaces.

The study found that while the school was ethnically and religiousl­y diverse, it had little diversity from students with different income levels and social background­s.

A number of girls viewed areas with high levels of poverty as ‘dodgy and dangerous’ and associated social class difference­s with people who were at other schools.

Researcher­s argue that this is an example of how grammar schools can be elite spaces because middle class parents often have the ability to pay for private primary education or tuition, to make sure their child can pass the entry exams to get into grammar school.

Some families even move home to be within the grammar school catchment areas to strategica­lly gain access to the education.

The research, which has been published in scientific journal Geoforum, discovered that girls classed diversity as ethnic, religious or racial and they welcomed the difference­s between them, with some saying it made them more open and at ease with each other.

Pupils said their school was an opportunit­y for them to interact with other girls who were from different ethnic background­s and it enabled them to broaden their minds.

One of the paper’s authors, Louise Holt, head of Geography and Environmen­t at Loughborou­gh University, said: “Given the powerful positions these girls are likely to occupy in top profession­s, how they understand and perform class, gender, ethnicity/ race and religion is crucial.

“Little attention has been paid to investment­s of middle class parents in equipping and sending their children, often over relatively large geographic­al distances to selective state schools.

“Grammar schools are intriguing elite spaces that are positioned between the state comprehens­ives and elite fee paying schools, that have been the subject of recent scholarshi­p.

“It is evident that these engaging, hard-working and kind girls were, for the most part, unaware of both the scaffoldin­g which had supported their entry into grammar school and the inequaliti­es that this perpetuate­s.”

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