EPI report reveals “decade of failure” to improve outcomes of GCSE pupils in poverty, while disadvantage gap widens for college and sixth form students
Education Policy Institute (EPI) publishes new research on the
‘disadvantage gap’ in education – a leading measure of social
mobility. Study finds that the gap in GCSE grades between students
in long-term poverty and their better off peers has failed to
improve over the last ten years. More students have now fallen into
longer-term poverty. Fears that the switch to teacher assessed
grades for GCSEs in 2020 would penalise students from disadvantaged
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A major report from the Education Policy Institute (EPI), funded by the Nuffield Foundation, concludes that the government has failed to improve the relative outcomes of students in long-term poverty after a decade of policy interventions. The new study, which examines the gap in grades between disadvantaged students and their peers, finds that students in long-term poverty trail their more affluent peers by 1.6 grades at GCSE – around the same gap as in 2011. The ‘disadvantage gap’ is a leading measure of social mobility in England and an indicator of the government’s progress in reducing inequalities in education. EPI researchers find that not only have large GCSE grade gaps for the most disadvantaged failed to narrow, but more students are now falling into longer term poverty. Areas in England such as Knowsley, Blackpool and Salford have a high proportion of students trapped in long-term poverty, which is likely hindering their ability to narrow large and persistent education gaps. The EPI report, which comes after the government has unveiled its Levelling Up White Paper, also gives the first comprehensive picture of the impact of 2020 grades on different students – the year that saw the first switch to teacher assessed grades. The research finds that concerns teacher assessed grades at GCSE would be biased against disadvantaged students have been largely unfounded, with poorer students seeing similar levels of grade inflation. Students with special educational needs, however, did lose out under this system. For students in 16-19 education in college and sixth form, the disadvantage gap increased in 2020: poorer students are now 3.1 grades behind their more affluent peers, up from 2.9 grades in 2019. The growing 16-19 education gap was driven by fewer poorer students taking A levels, which saw a bigger boost from teacher assessed grades than Applied General Qualifications, such as BTECs. Researchers warn that the lack of progress in narrowing disadvantage gaps across different ages, the rise in students falling into long-term poverty, and entrenched regional inequalities, are likely to severely constrain the government’s “levelling up” ambitions. The study’s authors also caution that inflated 2020 grades will significantly understate the effects of the pandemic on the “real” educational progress of students – with strong evidence of considerable underlying learning losses which are being masked by awarded grades – particularly for more disadvantaged students. ____________ Key findings The disadvantage gap at GCSE is large, and outcomes for the very poorest students in long-term poverty have failed to improve after a decade
Disadvantage gaps are much larger in certain areas of England, often where many students spend most of their lives confined to poverty
Geographic disadvantage gap data breakdowns, including by local authority and parliamentary constituency - access.
Recommendations for government
____________ Commenting on the new study, Emily Hunt, report co-author and Associate Director at the Education Policy Institute (EPI), said: “Our research shows that despite government policy interventions, there has been a decade of failure to improve the relative outcomes of students in long-term poverty – with these students still trailing their better off peers by over a full grade and a half at GCSE. “Not only has this education gap failed to narrow since 2011, but the proportion of poorer students falling into long-term poverty is now on the rise. “To reverse this tide of stagnating social mobility, the government must do more to address the fundamental drivers of deep-rooted educational inequalities, including poverty. “This is particularly critical after two years of disruption from the pandemic, where there is strong evidence of significant underlying losses that have not been reflected in students’ teacher assessed grades, with disadvantaged students losing out more." David Robinson, report co-author and Director of Post-16 and Skills at the Education Policy Institute (EPI): "It is deeply concerning that the grade gaps between poorer college and sixth form students and their more affluent peers are now widening. In 2020, disadvantaged 16-19 students were as many as three whole grades behind, and for the very poorest trapped in long-term poverty, this gap grew to as many as four grades. “Our research findings are very clear: these growing inequalities were driven by A levels gaining more from the system of teacher assessed grades than Applied General Qualifications, which far more disadvantaged students take. The result is that poorer students could have lost out when competing for university places. “These findings ought to alarm the government, and we hope that urgent action is taken to ensure that students taking BTECs and other alternatives to A levels do not lose out again in 2022.” Cheryl Lloyd, Education Programme Head at the Nuffield Foundation, said: “Students from lower income families are less likely to study A levels, which saw larger grade increases in 2020 than applied general qualifications such as BTECs. This means that young people from disadvantaged backgrounds were effectively penalised for not studying A levels, and the disadvantage gap in 16-19 education has become further entrenched.
“The report also shows that disadvantage gaps are greatest in
areas of the country that have a large proportion of students in
long-term poverty. While the government’s Levelling Up White
Paper promises to address geographical disparities, it is
important that this is supported by action to address persistent
underlying inequalities in the UK, such as poverty, which is
having an increasingly detrimental effect on the educational
outcomes of young people.”
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