Over the past decade, the literacy and
numeracy skills of 15-year-olds in England have improved
significantly relative to other high-income countries,
making England one of
the world's top performers in terms of school-age
attainment.
But high average levels of attainment
mask big and stubborn inequalities. Just 43% of 16-year-olds
eligible for free school meals achieved at least grade 4 in
English and maths in 2023, compared with 72% of their better-off
peers. This gap has
remained virtually unchanged for the past 20
years, and similar
inequalities exist at every stage of
education.
Pious promises to tackle these
inequalities have consistently come to
naught.
The next government will face
new challenges,
particularly in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.
School absences have increased
by almost two-thirds since
2019, with students
now missing an average of 14 days of school per year, up from an
average of less than 9 days in 2019.
37% of disadvantaged pupils
are now recorded as 'persistently absent' (meaning they miss at
least a day of school per fortnight on average)
compared with 23%
pre-pandemic. Among
less disadvantaged pupils, the share of ‘persistently absent'
pupils has doubled from 8% to 16% in the same
period.
In new IFS research, funded by the
Nuffield Foundation, we set out the mixed legacy that the next
Education Secretary will inherit and the emerging challenges
facing teachers and schools.
Key findings
include:
-
Within the UK, English
schools perform much better than those in Wales and
Scotland. Wales is
the most equal country in the OECD, but with much lower
levels of average attainment across the board than in
England.
-
The number of children on
an Education, Health and Care plan – the highest tier of
support for special educational needs – has risen by 60%
since 2016, with the fastest rise among children from less
disadvantaged backgrounds.
This increase is even more
striking since there is evidence of schools and local
authorities rationing support (98% of appeals are successful
at tribunals).
-
Behavioural and mental health
challenges are also up sharply; in 2022–23,
30% of girls aged 10–15
met the threshold for abnormally high emotional and
behavioural difficulties, up 5 percentage points since 2019–20. 10% of young
people now say they strongly dislike school (double the
pre-COVID rate).
Imran Tahir, IFS research
economist and an author of the report, said:
‘Over the past decade, teachers,
schools and government have made real progress on education.
England is now one of the top performers in international
assessments of reading and maths, and few countries deliver both
stronger results and lower inequality. But the scale of those
inequalities is still enormous – the gap between the most- and
least-disadvantaged fifth of 15-year-olds is equivalent to the
gap between the average in England and the average in Colombia.
If the next government wants to tackle these entrenched
inequalities, its challenge will be made even more difficult by
the legacy of the pandemic. Almost four in ten disadvantaged
pupils now miss at least one day of school per fortnight. Rates
of special educational needs and mental health challenges are
rising sharply. And twice as many young people now say they
strongly dislike school as before the pandemic. The key for the
next government will be to build on the progress made in pupil
attainment, but to address these new challenges that are putting
schools and teachers under severe
strain.'
Josh Hillman, Director of
Education at the Nuffield Foundation, said:
‘Inequalities in educational achievement and opportunity
remain large, and the COVID-19 pandemic has only widened them
further. Incoming education ministers that seek to address this
will need to develop innovative and well-resourced policies
around areas such as literacy and numeracy, special educational
needs and pupil absence. But other government departments will
also need to play a part to support the broader well-being of
disadvantaged children and young people, essential for their
educational development.'
ENDS
Notes to Editor
‘The state of education: what
awaits the next government?' is an IFS report by Christine
Farquharson, Andrew McKendrick, Nick Ridpath and Imran
Tahir.