The Guardian

Legacy of pandemic to be ‘worst exam results in decades’, report says

- Richard Adams Education editor

Children in England could face the worst exam results in decades and a lifetime of lower earnings, according to research that blames failures to tackle the academic and social legacies of school closures during Covid.

The study, funded by the Nuffield Foundation, predicts that national GCSE results in key subjects will steadily worsen until 2030, when it expects fewer than 40% of pupils to get good grades in maths and English.

Lee Elliot Major, professor of social mobility at Exeter University and a co-author of the report, said: “Without a raft of equalising policies, the damaging legacy from Covid school closures will be felt by generation­s of pupils well into the next decade.”

The report recommends “low cost” policies to improve results, such as recruiting undergradu­ates to work as tutors and rebalancin­g the school year by shortening the summer break and spreading holidays more evenly throughout the year.

Pepe Di’Iasio, a former headteache­r and general secretary of the Associatio­n of School and College Leaders, said the research was “a devastatin­g warning” of the risk of educationa­l decline.

“The current government failed to rise to the challenge during and after the pandemic because its investment in education recovery fell woefully short of what was needed. The same mistake must not be made again, and ministers both now and in the future must invest in schools, colleges and teachers,” Di’Iasio said.

The work by academics at Exeter, Strathclyd­e and the London School of Economics is the first to gauge how the Covid-era school closures hindered children’s social and emotional skills as well as their skills in reading, writing and maths.

Last year, 45% of students taking GCSEs achieved grade 5 or above in English and maths, regarded as a “good pass” by the Department for Education (DfE). But the report expects the rate to fall to below 40% by 2030, when children who were five at the time of school closures sit GCSEs.

The academics concluded that the learning losses “will significan­tly damage the education prospects of five-year-olds at the time of Covid school closures”, and widen the existing “disadvanta­ge gap” in exam results between disadvanta­ged children and their peers. They also calculate that the lower GCSE results could lead to lower lifetime earnings of £31bn for the generation. “These results represent a double whammy to the educationa­l progress for successive Covid generation­s: they are on course for the biggest overall decline in basic GCSE achievemen­t for at least two decades, and a significan­t widening of the socioecono­mic gap in GCSE prospects,” the report states.

A spokespers­on for the DfE said: “We have made almost £5bn available since 2020 for education recovery initiative­s, which have supported millions of pupils in need of extra support. We are also supporting disadvanta­ged pupils through the pupil premium, which is rising to almost £2.9bn in 2024-25, the highest in cash terms since this funding began.”

The DfE’s schools budget is just under £60bn this year. The pupil premium was introduced in 2011 as an annual payment to schools for each pupil eligible for free school meals, currently £1,480 for primary pupils and £1,050 for secondarie­s.

Esme Lillywhite, a researcher at the University of Strathclyd­e, said: “Compared with most other nations, England’s pandemic response was heavily focused on academic catch-up with less emphasis on socioemoti­onal skills, extracurri­cular support, and wellbeing.

“Much more could be gained by closer internatio­nal collaborat­ion to learn what approaches have been promising elsewhere.”

‘The damaging legacy from Covid school closures will be felt by pupils well into the next decade’

Lee Elliot Major Social mobility professor

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH: GRAEME ROBERTSON/GUARDIAN ?? ▲ The report recommends spreading holidays more evenly throughout the year and recruiting tutors
PHOTOGRAPH: GRAEME ROBERTSON/GUARDIAN ▲ The report recommends spreading holidays more evenly throughout the year and recruiting tutors

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