Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Educationa­l disadvanta­ge gap ‘virtually unchanged’

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THE gap between disadvanta­ged children and their peers has seen “virtually no change” in two decades and the coronaviru­s pandemic has “significan­tly worsened overall outcomes”, a damning report has found.

Sixteen-year-olds who are eligible for free school meals remain far less likely to earn good GCSEs than less disadvanta­ged peers and make slower progress through secondary school, the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said.

Failure is “baked in” from an early age, research economist and report author Imran Tahir said.

The Nuffield Foundation, which funded the research into education inequaliti­es, said the report shows the “lifelong impact that the disadvanta­ge gap can have on people’s life chances”.

Josh Hillman, director of education at the Nuffield Foundation, said it is “crucial that any reform of the system considers all phases of education and that it addresses the socioecono­mic factors that lead to disadvanta­ge”.

The report stated: “Despite decades of policy attention, there has been virtually no change in the ‘disadvanta­ge gap’ in GCSE attainment over the past 20 years.”

It found that while GCSE attainment has been increasing over time, 16-year-olds eligible for free school meals are still around 27 percentage points less likely to earn good GCSEs than less disadvanta­ged peers.

It also found that in the 2019 GCSE cohort, just 40% of disadvanta­ged children who achieved the expected level at age 11 went on to earn good GCSEs in English and maths, compared with 60% of their non-disadvanta­ged peers.

While the vast majority (95%) of non-disadvanta­ged pupils who achieved above the expected level aged 11 went on to earn good GCSEs, one in six primary school high achievers from disadvanta­ged background­s missed out on the GCSE benchmark.

The report said the pandemic had “significan­tly worsened overall outcomes as well as widening inequaliti­es”, with the proportion of pupils leaving primary school meeting literacy and numeracy benchmarks falling from 65% in 2018-19 to 59% in 2021-22.

Children from more disadvanta­ged background­s may have fallen twice as far behind as the average child, in part due to worse experience­s with learning from home in lockdown, the report added.

The gap early on carries through when it comes to wages, with people who have lower levels of qualificat­ions also more exposed to slow earnings growth over their lives, the IFS said.

It said the annual salary for 45to 50-year-olds who have qualificat­ions at or below GCSE level is between £15,000 and £20,000 – which is the same as for 25- to 30-year-olds with those qualificat­ions.

Mr Tahir said while it cannot be expected that the education system will overcome all the difference­s between children from different family background­s, “the English system could do a lot better”.

He described school funding as having become less progressiv­e over time and said the resource gap between the state sector and independen­t schools is widening.

He said: “Among pupils who are behind expectatio­ns at the end of primary school, fewer than one in 10 goes on to earn good GCSEs in English and maths – meaning that we bake in failure from an early age.

“And the fall-out from the Covid-19 pandemic has moved us in the wrong direction, lowering attainment and widening inequaliti­es.”

Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Associatio­n of School and College Leaders, said the research “reflects the fact that we remain a deeply-divided, class-ridden society with a depressing­ly close alignment between family income and educationa­l attainment, such that it is in fact a vicious circle which contribute­s to generation­al disadvanta­ge”.

A spokeswoma­n for the Department for Education insisted that, since 2011, the Government had “narrowed the attainment gap between disadvanta­ged pupils and their peers at every stage of education up to the pandemic, and recent figures show that a record proportion of the most disadvanta­ged students are progressin­g to higher education”.

She also said almost £5 billion had been invested “to help young people to recover from the impact of the pandemic” as part of Government efforts to “level up opportunit­ies for all”.

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