Economic Research Council: Analysis of remote learning
Summary: Whilst children have largely been spared from the medical
effect of COVID-19, they have faced significant disruption to their
education. This has been profound for primary school pupils,
although the effect for secondary school students has also been
significant. The average figures presented in this analysis are
unlikely to be relevant to any individual, as the extent of
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Summary:
Whilst children have largely been spared from
the medical effect of COVID-19, they have faced
significant disruption to their education. This has been
profound for primary school pupils, although the effect
for secondary school students has also been significant.
The average figures presented in this analysis are
unlikely to be relevant to any individual, as the extent
of remote learning has differed significantly. The
analysis also shows the disproportionate effect that
remote learning has had on more disadvantaged students.
Schools and policymakers therefore cannot take a
broad-brush approach in rectifying the issues associated
with remote learning.
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What does the chart
show?
The chart displays the proportion of
topics covered in school by remote learners as a
proportion of the topics covered by children that
attended school. The data is split by the
prevalence of children eligible for free school
meals. Quartile 1 represents schools with the
lowest proportion of free school meals
eligibility, whilst quartile 4 includes schools
with the highest proportion of free school meals
eligibility. The smaller chart also displays the
proportion of topics covered by remote learners,
comparing primary and secondary
schools.
Why is the chart
interesting?
The pandemic caused
incredible disruption to children’s
learning as schools scrambled to educate
students in their homes. Even as national
lockdowns ended, a large number of
students logged into remote lessons, or
completed independent work at home, due
to outbreaks in schools and year groups.
The majority, if not all students have
felt a significant impact on their
learning since the start of the pandemic.
What has been less clear, however, is the
magnitude of this impact. The chart above
sheds some light on those that have been
hit the hardest.
Addressing the smaller chart
above, the data clearly shows that
overall, primary school pupils have had a
more significant impact on their
education than secondary school pupils.
On average, between April 2020 and June
2021, primary school pupils who learnt
remotely only covered 61% of the content
they would have covered in school,
compared to 73% for secondary school
pupils. In addition to this, as to be
expected, primary school pupils were more
dependent on parental involvement when
learning remotely. This helps to explain
the difference in content coverage, as
more independent secondary school pupils
were able to get on with their education
with less assistance from parents, who
may also have been working
remotely.
The greater content coverage
of secondary school students may seem
promising at first, however, this still
leaves a schism between what has been
covered and what should have been.
Secondary school pupils who learnt
remotely missed out on over a quarter of
their education between the first
lockdown and the end of the last academic
year.
A word of caution should be
noted when assessing this data, however.
It takes an average based on each month
up to June 2021, excluding holiday
periods. National lockdowns and school
closures only take up part of this time,
meaning the majority of students were
educated in school during parts of this
period. Where most students were in
school, students who were educated
remotely would have either tested
positive for coronavirus, were in contact
with a positive case, or were shielding.
This presents a wide variance in terms of
the total time an individual could have
been learning remotely, with some only
learning remotely when schools were
ordered to close, and others spending a
significantly higher proportion of their
time at home due to the reasons stated
above. This is the crucial problem facing
schools and policymakers. The chart shows
that primary schools need to have
provisions and resources in place to
ensure that students catch up to an
acceptable standard before starting
secondary school, but the more
challenging issue is how schools can
identify and support those students who
have disproportionately engaged in remote
learning.
The number of children on
free school meals rose to 1.7 million in
early 2021. Much has been discussed on
the supply of these meals, with Marcus
Rashford leading a charge to extend their
provision. The chart above shows how the
uptake of free school meals, a useful
proxy for the level of disadvantage, has
interacted with outcomes of remote
learning. Quartile one represents the
schools with the smallest proportion of
pupils eligible for free school meals,
whilst quartile four include schools with
the highest proportion. We see a clear
negative correlation between free school
meal eligibility and content covered in
remote learning, where schools with the
smallest proportion of pupils eligible
for free school meals covered over 74% of
the content, and schools with the highest
eligibility only covered 66% of the
content.
Several factors can explain
this phenomenon. Firstly, where free
school meal eligibility is low, teachers
are more able to utilise technology that
pupils have access to. The National
Foundation for Education Research found
that the proportion of students with
little to no access to IT in deprived
areas was twice that of affluent areas.
In addition to this, societal issues that
can be linked with a greater prevalence
of free school meal eligibility tend to
have a greater impact on students when
learning remotely compared to in school.
School can be a haven for some students,
and the removal of that safety net will
not only have impacted educational
attainment but personal and social
factors as well.
The path forward is a complex
one to navigate. Schools are no doubt
getting to grips with the challenges
associated with 2 academic years of
disruption and implementing plans to
bring students up to speed. For these to
be effective, forensic analysis of the
needs of individual students is required.
In addition, a concerted effort is needed
from policymakers to ensure that
resources are directed appropriately to
the schools that require them the most.
This can only take a bottom-up approach,
directed by educational establishments
who understand the specific needs of
their cohorts, and the challenges they
have faced thus far.
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