Provide extra funding for education recovery in Spending Review or risk lasting damage to pupils, EPI report warns
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EPI report reveals significant impact of learning losses caused by
the pandemic, with pupils facing likely lost earnings of at least
£16,000 each – meaning hundreds of billions in total national
income lost. The PM’s levelling up agenda is “under serious threat”
from large pupil learning losses found in parts of the north of
England and the Midlands. Government has allocated £3.1bn for
education recovery, but a £13.5bn funding package is required to
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Significant, additional spending to help pupils to recover from lost learning will be required in next week’s Spending Review in order to avoid long-term damage to life chances and the nation’s finances, a new report from the Education Policy Institute (EPI) warns. Based on EPI analysis commissioned by the Department for Education (DfE), the new report models the long-run impact of the pandemic on future earnings, finding that pupils are each likely lose at least £16,000 in earnings, rising to £46,000 in a worst-case scenario if the government fails to intervene. Taken together, it finds that losses to earnings would result in total lost national income running into the hundreds of billions – leading to substantial reductions in contributions to public services, and lower productivity and economic growth. The new report lays bare the wide regional disparities in the amount of learning lost by pupils – differences that are yet to be addressed by government under its current education recovery plan. Pupils in parts of the north of England and the Midlands have seen learning losses that are greater than those in other regions, while poorer pupils nationally have also lost more learning – findings that are likely to greatly hinder the Prime Minister’s “levelling up” plans. Prior to the pandemic, disadvantaged pupils were already 18 months of learning behind their more affluent peers by the time they took their GCSEs. The pandemic has now exacerbated this education gap, undoing a significant amount of the progress made in closing it over the last two decades. Based on its latest modelling, the EPI report shows that an education recovery settlement of £13.5bn over three years will be required from the government to fully address learning losses and avoid cementing wide educational inequalities. Newly appointed Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi has reportedly made a case to the Treasury for additional recovery funding beyond the government’s existing £3.1bn commitment. Per pupil, current education recovery spending in England amounts to around £310 per pupil – a figure dwarfed by programmes in the US and The Netherlands, which amount to around £2,000 per pupil. The new report also considers the future of the National Tutoring Programme (NTP) – the government’s flagship programme for helping pupils to catch up with pandemic learning loss. Researchers identify a number of risks that could impede the success of NTP as it enters its second full year.
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Pupils have lost a significant amount of learning – this is likely to have severe long-run consequences, and may thwart the government’s “levelling up” plans.
How much should the government spend on education recovery, and how should funding be allocated? The level of funding required for pupils’ education recovery
The future of the National Tutoring Programme: risks and recommendations
“The level of lost learning seen by pupils in England is considerable. Left unaddressed, our modelling shows that these losses may have adverse consequences for millions of pupils, negatively affecting their lifetime earnings. In total, this could cost the government hundreds of billions in national income. “We need to see more ambitious efforts to repair the damage done by the pandemic to pupils’ learning. Funding for education programmes significantly trails those seen in other rich countries such as the US and the Netherlands. This should be met with a targeted approach to support that acknowledges pupils in certain areas of the country have taken a far greater hit to their education than others.” Natalie Perera, Chief Executive of the Education Policy Institute (EPI), commented: “The government’s existing education recovery plans have fallen well short of what the evidence says is required to support pupils – but it now has the opportunity to prioritise recovery in the forthcoming spending review. “Pupils in parts of the north of England and the Midlands are facing learning losses that are greater than those in other regions. Current education recovery support for young people, including the government’s National Tutoring Programme, is yet to address these disparities – leaving the Prime Minister’s levelling up agenda under serious threat. “Without a bold education recovery funding settlement targeted at those pupils who need it most, any wider plans from the government to address longstanding regional inequalities are consigned to fail.” |
