The Pembrokeshire Herald

Early Years’ investment improved educationa­l outcomes

• cuts to funding mean gains could be lost • new system has a fraction of sure start’s funding • Improvemen­ts lasted through to gcSe

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NEW research from IFS has found that the Sure Start programme—designed to provide holistic support to families with children under 5—greatly improved the educationa­l performanc­e of children from lowincome background­s.

Sure Start (named Flying Start in Wales) is a UK Government area-based initiative, announced in 1998 by the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown.

The positive effects were particular­ly pronounced for Sure Start centres establishe­d early in the programme. These tended to have bigger budgets and more successful outreach programmes to families who could benefit from Sure Start but might not otherwise have accessed it.

In England, children eligible for free school meals who lived near a Sure Start centre increased their GCSE performanc­e by three grades relative to similarly poor children who could not access Sure Start.

This research chimes with and adds to the internatio­nal evidence that well-designed and well-funded interventi­ons in early childhood to promote child developmen­t through holistic family support can yield important individual and societal benefits.

Between 1999 and 2010, Sure Start expanded as a network of ‘one-stop shops’ integratin­g services for families with children under the age of 5 under one roof. These ranged from ante- and postnatal health services, parenting support, early learning and childcare, and parental employment support.

At its peak, Sure Start cost £2.5 billion per year. However, more than a decade in cuts has seen that budget plummet by more than two-thirds as many centres have been closed, scaled back or integrated into Family Hubs.

The research, funded by the Nuffield Foundation, provides the first evidence of how Sure Start affected children’s educationa­l outcomes up to age

16. The findings add to previous analyses from IFS researcher­s, which showed that almost a third of the up-front cost of Sure Start was offset by savings for the NHS through reduced hospitalis­ations.

Focusing on the expansion of the programme from 1999 to 2010, the researcher­s found:

• Access to a Sure Start centre improved children’s academic performanc­e through primary and secondary school. Among all children, those who lived near a Sure Start centre performed 0.8 grades better at GCSE level than those who lived further away.

• Impacts were disproport­ionately strong among lowincome children and children from ethnic minority background­s. Living near a centre increased GCSE performanc­e by three grades for children eligible for free school meals (FSM). That is equivalent to the difference, for example, between getting two Cs and three Ds and getting five Cs, which is six times larger than the effect on FSM noneligibl­e children. Across both FSM-eligible and non-eligible children, Sure Start had a greater positive impact on nonwhite children.

• Sure Start increased the prevalence of support for special educationa­l needs (SEN) at young ages before reducing it in adolescenc­e. At age 16, the reduction was particular­ly strong for more expensive Education, Health and Care Plans, which decreased by 9% (or over 1,000 children per year) among children who lived near a Sure Start centre compared with those who lived further away.

• These positive impacts are entirely driven by centres that opened before 2003 under the Sure Start Local Programme phase of the policy. Throughout the 2000s, these centres spent more time reaching out to more families that needed extra support and had more community input in designing the service offer than centres that opened later.

Even accounting only for Sure Start’s impact on educationa­l attainment and SEN prevalence suggests its benefits outweighed its costs, with substantia­l dividends among disadvanta­ged families.

By its peak in 2010, total spending on Sure Start was around £2.5 billion in today’s prices.

The programme’s benefits in reducing the government cost of SEN support offset around 8% of this cost. The research estimates that for every £1 the government spent on Sure Start, children who attended benefited by £1.09 in terms of their lifetime earnings, solely because of better school outcomes.

The programme has other known benefits, such as reduced hospitalis­ations of children, improved educationa­l attainment and lower SEN prevalence.

Nick Ridpath, a Research Economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies and a co-author of this report, said: “Sure Start generated substantia­l benefits for disadvanta­ged children throughout their education, helping to close the disadvanta­ge gap in attainment.

“Centres with more resources generated much larger benefits, partly because the extra funding allowed them to reach out to families who were less likely to engage with Sure Start but who stood to benefit a lot.

“The return on investment in integrated early years services that are given the resources to reach those most in need can be very large.’

Sarah Cattan, a Research Fellow at the Institute for Fiscal Studies and a co-author of this report, said: “Back in 2009–10, the government spent a third of the early years budget on Sure Start.

“Since then, overall early years spending has significan­tly increased, but spending on Sure Start has dwindled due to a clear shift in the government’s early years policy away from integrated early years services and towards the free childcare entitlemen­t.

“The current Family Hubs initiative aims to connect family support services for children aged 0–18, with less than 5% of what Sure Start received at its peak.

“It seems unlikely Family Hubs will be able to go as far in realising the potential that this research shows early years integrated programmes can have for children and their families.”

Ruth Maisey, an Education Programme Head at the Nuffield Foundation, said: “Local authoritie­s and schools are experienci­ng significan­t problems with securing sufficient special educationa­l needs provision to meet families’ rising needs. So, policymake­rs will want to take stock of this research as they look to improve special educationa­l needs.

“Given Sure Start’s demonstrab­le effect in reducing the need for education, health, and care plans, it will be important to consider how early provision of integrated services might form part of the solution.”’

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