Over 1,000 disadvantaged students who did well in primary school
are missing out on top grades at GCSE each year, according to new
research published by the Sutton Trust today.
Potential for
Success looks at how students with high
prior attainment in England perform at school and reviews the
evidence to find out how best to support them to reach their full
potential.
The report finds that poorer pupils are less likely to perform
well at the end of primary school than their classmates. Only 4%
of disadvantaged students score in the top 10% when they’re 11
years old, compared to 13% of their more advantaged peers.
But even those disadvantaged pupils who get good grades in
primary school fall behind their classmates with similar levels
of attainment by the time they get to GCSE. 52% of these
disadvantaged students get at least 5 A*-A grades at GCSE,
compared to 72% of their classmates.
According to the report, if poorer students who do well at the
end of primary school performed as well at GCSE as their
classmates with similar levels of prior attainment, over 1,000
more disadvantaged students would achieve at least 5 A*-A grades
each year.
As well as a student’s background, the research finds that the
type and characteristics of the school they go to impacts on how
well pupils with good grades at the end of primary school do
later in school. High-attaining students do better at GCSE in
schools in London and in converter academies, as well as schools
with more high-attaining students. They do worse at schools with
more free school meal eligible pupils, further highlighting the
barriers faced by young people in poorer areas of the country.
While there are far higher proportions of pupils who did well at
primary school in grammar schools - over half of all students in
grammars were in the top 10% at the end of primary school,
compared to just 8% of students in comprehensives - the report
finds that disadvantaged students make up a much smaller
proportion of the high attainers in grammars: just 1 in 17 of all
high attainers in grammars are from lower socioeconomic
backgrounds, compared to 1 in 8 in comprehensive schools.
The report also highlights that white students from disadvantaged
backgrounds have the lowest level of attainment at GCSE, with
only 45% with high prior attainment gaining 5A*-A at GCSE,
compared to 63% of black students and 67% of Asian students.
Potential for Success identifies examples of good
practice in schools who do particularly well for their pupils
with good grades at the end of primary school. However most
schools have very small numbers of these students, with a typical
school having just 11, one of which will be disadvantaged.
To combat this ‘wasted talent’ and ensure that disadvantaged
students are able to fulfil their potential, the Sutton Trust is
calling for stronger evidence and evaluation of activities that
support pupils who did well at the end of primary school. The
report also recommends that:
-
Ofsted inspections should routinely assess a school’s provision
for disadvantaged students and GCSE attainment scores for poorer
pupils with high prior attainment should be published in school
league tables.
-
Access to high quality teaching should be increased, with
incentives for teachers with more experience and subject
specialism to teach in disadvantaged schools.
-
Support students with the potential for high-attainment should be
as inclusive as possible given that they can be difficult to
identify.
- All
students should have access to high quality extra-curricular
activities to boost essential life skills.
As part of efforts to combat the problem, the Sutton Trust runs
Sutton Scholars, a programme for high-attaining state school
students in early secondary school.
Sir Peter Lampl, Founder of the Sutton Trust and Chairman
of the Education Endowment Foundation, said:
“It is worrying to see that disadvantaged pupils with the
potential for high achievement are falling behind their more
advantaged peers. All pupils should be given the chance to
realise their potential regardless of their background.
“We need better evidence of how to improve the attainment of
disadvantaged highly able students. Schools should be monitored
and incentivised to do this.”
For further information please contact Hilary Cornwell or Grace
Veenman at the Sutton Trust on 020 7802 1660 / 07951
447956
NOTES TO EDITORS
-
The Sutton Trust is
a foundation set up in 1997, dedicated to improving social
mobility through education. It has published over 200 research
studies and funded and evaluated programmes that have helped
hundreds of thousands of young people of all ages, from early
years through to access to the professions.
- The
full report will be available at 0001 on Thursday from this
link: https://www.suttontrust.com/research-paper/potential-for-success-schools-high-attainers/
- The
report is authored by Dr Rebecca Montacute, Research Fellow at
the Sutton Trust
- The
report uses data from the National Pupil Database, focusing on
the top 10% of pupils in English and maths measured at Key Stage
2 at the end of primary school, and looks at their GCSE
performance, measured over three years from 2014-2016. Case study
schools were selected on the basis of the performance of their
disadvantaged students with high prior attainment during this
period of time.