Children starting reception this term are expected to face the
most challenging school start for generations, as new analysis
from the charity Nesta reveals that the average pupil missed more
than a quarter of their early years education due to the
pandemic.
In 2019, the average four-year old spent 25 hours a week at
nursery - around three full days - in the year before they
started school. The new analysis estimates that children starting
reception this month will have only spent an average of 18 hours
a week at nursery - just over two full days.*
“With new reception classes starting this week, children are
likely to need additional support to help them adjust to the
school environment and catch up on some of the development they
will have missed out on due to nursery closures,” says Louise
Bazalgette from Nesta, who leads projects aimed at improving
school readiness for disadvantaged children. “No class is ever at
exactly the same level, but there are likely to be even greater
differences than usual this year due to the pandemic. There will
be more struggling children who need extra support to help them
to fulfil their potential. The Department for Education has
provided catch up funding, but with only £80 per pupil it will be
challenging to support the wide range of needs pupils may have in
areas ranging from their social and emotional and physical
development, to more academic areas like literacy and maths.
“Early years education is an incredibly important part of a
child’s life, shaping educational and employment outcomes for
decades to come. Nurseries and other forms of early years
education including childminders provide much more than
childcare, they offer essential opportunities for children to
learn, play and socialise to develop skills that help them to get
on in school. Free entitlements to early education also play a
vital role in narrowing the outcome gap between richer and poorer
children.”
The analysis found that nursery attendance fell dramatically at
the start of the pandemic, recovering gradually after the first
wave but never returning to pre-pandemic levels. From the start
of the autumn 2020 term to the end of the summer 2021 term, the
overall average attendance was 73% of previous levels.
“We found that the pandemic affected nursery attendance across
the board, with no clear link between an area’s socioeconomic
indicators and its nursery attendance,” explains Izzy Stewart,
Data Scientist at Nesta, who led the analysis. “We also didn’t
find any strong correlation between infection hotspots and poor
attendance, suggesting that the effect was largely down to
behavioural factors.”
, Labour’s Shadow Minister for Children and Early
Years, responding to Nesta analysis showing that new
reception pupils are the ‘least school-ready’ for generations,
said:
“The Conservatives failed management of the pandemic on top of
a decade of childcare closures has deprived children of the
early education that sets them up for the rest of their lives.
“Labour’s Children’s Recovery Plan would enable early years
providers and schools to deliver targeted learning support for
young children alongside the breakfast clubs and activities
that every child needs to thrive.
“It is time for the Conservatives to match Labour’s ambition
for the next generation and set out a proper plan for
children’s recovery after coronavirus.”
Ends
Notes to editors
- Labour has set out a comprehensive Children’s Recovery Plan to help every child
bounce back from the pandemic. Labour’s plan would deliver:
-
- Small group tutoring for all who need it
- Breakfast clubs and activities for every child
- Quality mental health support for children in every
school
- Continued professional development for teachers to
support pupils to catch up on lost learning, and
- Targeted extra investment from early years to further
education to support young people who struggled most with
learning in lockdown