Social Mobility Commission: State of the Nation Report 3.04
pm Lucy Powell (Manchester Central) (Lab/Co-op) I beg
to move, That this House notes the contents and
recommendations of the annual State of the Nation report from the
Social Mobility Commission; notes that despite welcome measures by
successive governments to improve social...Request free trial
Social Mobility Commission: State of the Nation Report
3.04 pm
-
(Manchester Central)
(Lab/Co-op)
I beg to move,
That this House notes the contents and recommendations of
the annual State of the Nation report from the Social
Mobility Commission; notes that despite welcome measures by
successive governments to improve social mobility the
Commission warns that social mobility is getting worse, the
reasons for which are deep-seated and multi-faceted; and
calls on the Government to lead a renewed approach in the
early years, in education, skills and housing, to improve
social mobility.
This motion stands in my name and those of the right hon.
Members for Loughborough (Nicky Morgan) and for Sheffield,
Hallam (Mr Clegg).
May I start by putting it on record that my thoughts are
with the victims of the terror attack yesterday? I thank
the emergency services for their dedication, bravery and
service, and the House staff who looked after us so well
yesterday. That we are meeting today shows that we can
carry on with our democracy and debates in such times. It
also shows that we often come together in this House, as we
are doing today in the spirit of this important debate on
social mobility.
This debate, with Members on both sides of the House
joining together to champion social mobility, is welcome
and timely. I have been delighted to work closely with the
right hon. Members for Loughborough and for Sheffield,
Hallam over recent weeks, and it is our hope and intention
that we continue that work beyond today to truly build a
cross-party consensus for a strategy for tackling social
mobility. I also thank the Government’s Social Mobility
Commission for all its important work. As it has
consistently warned, by all measures social mobility is
getting worse, not better. It recently said:
“Low levels of social mobility are impeding the progress”
of many in our society, “not only the poorest”. That is the
context for our debate.
We need a better understanding of what we mean by
increasing social mobility in the modern economy. Too
often, social mobility is thought of in terms of plucking
the one or two lucky ones out of disadvantage and taking
them to the top—the so-called “council house to the Cabinet
table” journey. That understanding is really unhelpful when
we are looking at the challenges and opportunities that our
country faces, and the strategy required to deal with them.
In today’s context, social mobility is about everyone being
able to make economic and social progress, unconfined by
the disadvantages they begin with. With Brexit, automation,
digitalisation and huge changes to work, that process is
going to get harder and ever more squeezed. No longer can
this just be about those who go to university, as everyone
needs to gain a rich, stretching education and the skills
to succeed.
To put it another way, if we look ahead to the needs of the
economy in, say, 2022, forecasts by the Social Mobility
Commission show that there will be 9 million low-skilled
people chasing just 4 million jobs, yet a shortfall of 3
million workers for the higher-skilled jobs. That is before
the effects of Brexit. The biggest barrier to dealing with
this issue is known as the long tail of underachievement.
At the same time, companies such as Google say that we are
not producing enough of the right engineering graduates for
their growth. Britain has the third highest proportion of
graduates in non-graduate jobs in Europe, with only Greece
and Estonia behind us. No wonder our productivity is so
poor compared with that of other OECD countries. In fact,
it takes a British worker five days to produce the same
amount of work that a German worker can do in four
days—that is the stark challenge we face. Any social
mobility strategy must therefore also be inextricably
linked to our industrial strategy.
These huge challenges require a new national mission built
on consensus and evidence to turn them into real
opportunities for the country, and that is what we hope to
address with this debate and our work. But, let us be
honest, although much progress has been made by successive
Governments, the political cycle means that every party is
guilty of looking for a quick fix or a new wheeze that
might appeal to voters, rather than the more difficult job
of putting in place a clear and determined strategy. Let us
look at the evidence and stick with it, even if at times
that means giving praise to our opponents, as we will be
doing today.
We know from the Social Mobility Commission and others that
when it comes to education, some areas are absolutely key.
I will focus on a few of those now and I know that Members
will pick up others in their speeches. First, I want to
look at the facts on early years, which will not come as a
surprise to those who know me well, because it is a
personal passion of mine. By the age of five, children from
disadvantaged backgrounds are already far behind their
peers, with a developmental gap of as much as 15 months
between those from advantaged and disadvantaged
backgrounds. One study found that children in low-income
households hear up to 30 million fewer words by the age of
three than their better-off peers. The levels achieved by
the time a child is five are still the biggest predictors
of outcomes at GCSE.
What happens in the first few years of life is massively
critical, yet that still does not demand nearly enough
Government and policy attention. We have made some progress
under successive Governments. The Labour Government did so
through the extension of maternity leave, Sure Start
centres, the integration and expansion of health
visitors—that was continued by the Conservative
Government—and the introduction of quality early education
for three and four-year-olds. The introduction of the
two-year-olds offer was much championed by the right hon.
Member for Sheffield, Hallam, and the right hon. Member for
Loughborough developed the beginnings of a real life
chances strategy. However, I worry that the recent focus
has been on childcare and the demand of maternal employment
rates alone, and less on social mobility reasons for
investing in the early years.
A greater focus on what works and on joined-up working does
not actually need to cost more money. For example, the
quality and outcomes in Ofsted ratings do not match. After
looking at this recently, I found that 91% of early years
providers are rated good or outstanding, yet a third of
children are not leaving those settings school-ready—that
does not match up. There are other ways in which we could
incentivise quality providers to work with—not in
competition with—others in their locality. There could be
more support for parents through regular contact, as well
as things such as the ages and stages requirements. We have
been doing some interesting work on this in Manchester.
Remarkably, some of the most deprived communities in many
parts of the country have some of the highest quality early
years provision—this is often what we think of as the
silver bullet in education—through maintained nursery
schools and some of the nursery places attached to schools.
Let us cherish those and not put them under threat. A
proper focus on narrowing the gap before the age of five
would have a real impact on social mobility.
Let us now consider slightly older children. By the age of
16, just one in three disadvantaged children gained five
good GCSEs including English and maths, and that figure has
remained stubborn over the past few years. We know what
works in schools and we have seen it happen. It was
epitomised by the London challenge, when leadership,
collaboration, resources, the attraction and retention of
outstanding teachers, and the development of Teach First
all came together.
-
(Mitcham and
Morden) (Lab)
Would my hon. Friend like to thank for all the work that he
did on the London Challenge? Throughout all my time during
the Labour Government, I found him to be the most effective
and passionate Minister when it came to improving schools.
He has a truly brilliant record.
-
I very much thank for all his work and,
indeed, my hon. Friend the Member for Liverpool, West Derby
(Stephen Twigg), who was a Minister at the time of the
London initiative.
The London challenge was one of those Government
initiatives that achieved real change, including the
biggest rise in attainment we have seen in an area. The
opportunity areas developed by the right hon. Member for
Loughborough during her time in office are good successors,
but they need to be matched by resources and the ability to
attract and retain the best teachers. The pupil premium has
been a remarkable development that has allowed those who
are behind to begin to catch up during their time in
school. Let us follow these learnings and not get
distracted by things that do not work.
By the age of 25, many of these children will be in
low-skilled, low-paid jobs. Only one in 10 low-paid workers
will ever escape low pay. That is a pretty terrible outcome
for them and our country and, as I said, those jobs are
disappearing, too. Our skills strategy for post-16 and
in-work training needs strengthening. I welcome the
Government’s moves in this area. Proposals such as
T-levels, the apprenticeship levy and the skills plan
linked to the industrial plan are all very much to be
welcomed. Although I have some criticisms of the way in
which initiatives such as university technical colleges are
working, they are a good idea, but they do need more focus
and work.
Let us not implement some of these good initiatives badly,
however, and lose what we know works. For example, on
T-levels, we need to make sure that we continue to have the
blend of technical and academic that will be so important
for the jobs of the future. If we look at all our OECD
competitor countries, it clear that it is critical that
children continue to work on maths and English to a high
level right to the age of 18. The post-16 reforms also need
matching with other reforms, such as pathways out of
university. As I said earlier, the underperformance and
under-skilled jobs of many of our graduates fundamentally
need addressing. Access to the professions is key, and
other Members will talk about that.
Those are just three of the key areas that can drive social
mobility—the early years, what happens in schools, and
post-16—but we also know what does not work in terms of
social mobility, and I want to talk about that for a
minute. One thing that does not work is grammar schools.
Unfortunately, under the current Prime Minister, grammar
schools and selection seem to take centre stage in her
vision for dealing with social mobility. They are sucking
up all the oxygen in the debate, yet the evidence is clear:
they do nothing for social mobility; in fact, they make it
worse.
-
(Stretford and Urmston)
(Lab)
I compliment my hon. Friend and the right hon. Members for
Loughborough (Nicky Morgan) and for Sheffield, Hallam (Mr
Clegg) for securing the debate. In Trafford, as she knows,
we already have a selective system, and although our
schools perform very well overall in the national
rankings—that is despite selection, not because of it—one
group that does not benefit are children with special
educational needs and disabilities. Only a tiny proportion
get into grammar schools in Trafford, and it is believed
that that is in part because those schools have no
incentive to take them. Does my hon. Friend agree that any
selective system is bound to lead to children being brushed
aside when it comes to opportunities to get the best
education?
-
I absolutely agree, and my hon. Friend has campaigned on
this issue for many years. While Trafford has many good and
outstanding schools, recent data show that the top 25% and
the bottom 25% of pupils do worse than those in
neighbouring Manchester, so there are questions about
attainment gaps to address.
The list of organisations that are against more selection
in schools is ever growing. The OECD says that countries
with selective education perform less well on average than
those with comprehensive systems. The previous and the
current chief inspector of schools do not agree with more
grammars. The Government’s own Social Mobility Commission,
the Education Policy Institute, the Fair Education
Alliance, Teach First, the teaching unions, multi-academy
trust leaders and all the headteachers in Surrey are among
those who have come out against selection. Perhaps that is
because grammar schools contain such tiny, tiny numbers of
poorer pupils—just 2.6% across the piece.
-
(Scunthorpe) (Lab)
Some 11% of students at sixth-form colleges are on free
school meals, compared with 3% at selective grammar
schools, yet sixth-form colleges perform so well. There
needs to be more focus on the success of these engines of
social mobility than we have perhaps had recently.
-
My hon. Friend is absolutely right to draw attention to
sixth-form colleges. All the data show what great outcomes
they deliver for a comprehensive intake of pupils. Indeed,
Loreto sixth-form college in my constituency is one of the
top 5% in the country in terms of outcomes for its pupils,
and it is in the heart of inner-city Manchester.
New analysis by Professor and a team of
academics shows that poor, bright children are much less
likely to attend grammar schools than more affluent
children who are not as bright. In England, the best
performing boroughs are comprehensive. For example, London,
which I have mentioned, outperforms selective areas and the
national average in its top GCSE results. In contrast, the
attainment gap is worse than the national average in eight
out of nine fully selective areas, so the evidence is
pretty overwhelming.
I am sure that when he rises to speak later, the Minister
will repeat the one fact that he is particularly keen on
—of course, there is another one that he likes about modern
foreign languages—which is that in grammar schools, the
tiny number of children on free school meals do better than
all the other children in the country on free school meals.
What the Government fail to tell us is that the children
who get into grammar schools are already highly able, by
definition, so the Government are not comparing like with
like. In fact, highly able children do just as well in good
and outstanding comprehensive schools as their counterparts
do in grammar schools.
The grammar school policy is wrong in itself when it comes
to social mobility, but it is also a huge distraction. I am
setting out an agenda, which is shared by the Social
Mobility Commission and other hon. Members, around the
early years, schools, post-16 and other areas. That agenda
would keep any Minister or Department extremely busy, but
the Government have also embarked on other major overhauls,
including the new national fair funding formula—that has
caused much consternation on both sides of the House—the
biggest reform of GCSEs in a generation, new SATs, the
creation of hundreds of thousands of new school places to
deal with the massive increase in demand, and a reduction
in the amount of funding and number of teachers per pupil.
The divisive pursuit of more selection in grammars will
require huge political capital and a great deal of
officials’ attention, and it will mean that all the other
really important work, some of which the Government have
already embarked on, will fail.
I do not think that we would be having this debate about
grammars and selection if we had done more in recent years
to create a cross-party consensus on what needs to be done
to tackle the lack of social mobility. Our intention in
this debate is to look at and develop an understanding of
what works, and to build a broad consensus.
-
Mr (Enfield, Southgate)
(Con)
I apologise for not being around for the beginning of the
hon. Lady’s speech. When it comes to building consensus, if
she were willing to cross the Rubicon in terms of more
selective education, would it not be a good idea to focus
it on the opportunity areas and coldspots that the Social
Mobility Commission has highlighted?
-
I am not sure whether the hon. Gentleman is saying that he
thinks that selection would work in such areas. There is no
evidence for that at all, especially when I look at the
fantastic schools in my constituency. My constituency has
some of the highest levels of deprivation in the country—I
think it is the second ranking constituency for child
poverty in the whole country—but I have some outstanding
schools that get amazing results in a comprehensive
setting. I do not understand how selection will help them;
it will simply make their job all the more difficult.
-
Mr Burrowes
We may well disagree on some of the principles and
practice, but if there is to be increased opportunity for
selective education, would not the best place to focus it
be in the areas of most need—those opportunity areas
coldspots highlighted by the Social Mobility Commission?
-
No, I disagree fundamentally. As we have seen historically
and evidentially, opportunity areas such as the London
challenge work when we bring schools together and encourage
them to collaborate, rather than creating an environment of
competition. Such areas work when we ensure that they have
the best teachers, the right resources and strong,
collective leadership. Bringing a selective agenda into
that ecosystem will work against all those core principles.
I think that there is a broad consensus about what needs to
be done, and I hope that we can devote political time, and
the time of Ministers and officials, to that. The important
things are: quality in the early years; targeting
resources; creating and developing opportunity areas;
getting the best teachers where they are needed; developing
a skills strategy focused on jobs; creating job
opportunities and access to the best jobs; and securing
progress through those jobs for the many, not the few.
3.24 pm
-
(Loughborough)
(Con)
I echo the words of the hon. Member for Manchester Central
(Lucy Powell) and of many other speakers in the House today
in paying tribute to those who lost their lives or were
injured yesterday, and to the House staff for keeping us
safe. It is very important that the House’s business has
resumed today. As the Prime Minister said earlier,
yesterday was an attack on democracy. It is therefore
important that our democracy should continue unabated
today, and where better to start than on so important an
issue as social mobility?
I was just looking at Twitter, as you do, and I see that
somebody has tweeted, “How can there be a debate this
afternoon if everyone agrees?” I suspect many of us spend
our time trying to explain why everybody disagrees in this
place, and why we are busy arguing and falling out with
each other, so on the whole I think it is rather nice to
have a debate in which people can broadly agree that there
is an issue with social mobility in this country that we
all want to tackle.
I thank the hon. Lady and the right hon. Member for
Sheffield, Hallam (Mr Clegg) for co-sponsoring this debate,
and I thank all those outside the House who have sent
briefings to Members sharing their thoughts on today’s
debate. The November 2016 Social Mobility Commission report
said:
“Britain has a deep social mobility problem which is
getting worse for an entire generation of young people”.
The Teach First briefing for this debate says:
“Failing to improve low levels of social mobility will cost
the UK economy up to £14billion a year by 2050, or an
additional four per cent of GDP.”
Frankly, we cannot afford not to tackle it.
I want to talk about three things: Britain’s social
contract; schools, to pick up some of the issues that the
hon. Member for Manchester Central has mentioned; and
social capital. Every generation expects there to be
greater opportunities for their children and grandchildren.
In Britain at the moment, that social contract and the
expectation of social mobility has broken down in parts of
our country and among some groups of people. Education is a
key driver of social mobility—I know that the Minister is
committed to this, because I have had the privilege of
working alongside him—but in the parts of the country that
most need social mobility, there is often little
educational aspiration, and underperformance is entrenched.
I agree that tackling that should be the focus of this
Government’s education policy, rather than having yet
another discussion about expanding selection.
Last year’s vote and the rise of populism not just in this
country but elsewhere, including in the United States, was
a cry showing that our social contract has broken down. As
I have said, each generation expects better opportunities
for the next, but I think we should be honest in saying—I
know this from my casework, but also from talking to
friends and family—that that is not how many people see
life today. There is pressure on housing services, and
housing is unaffordable for the next generation in many
parts of this country. The labour market feels incredibly
insecure, but also very demanding, which has a knock-on
effect.
The hon. Lady mentioned the numbers of words that children
from different backgrounds know by the age of three. There
is some very interesting research in the Social Mobility
Commission report about the number of minutes each day that
parents from different backgrounds spend interacting with
their younger children. People working long hours in an
insecure job will inevitably have less time to interact
with their children than those not in that position. What
can we do to help with that?
-
Mr Burrowes
I thank my right hon. Friend for highlighting the issue of
parental contact, but may I focus on contact with fathers?
The Government have made great strides in trying to ensure
greater opportunities in work, but we must also look at how
to create greater opportunities to ensure that fathers are
not only in contact but are involved in their children’s
upbringing. I saw from clients in the criminal justice
system that one of the prevailing factors for them was
either an absent father or a father who was not involved in
their lives.
-
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. The importance of
families and of having two parents or two important role
models in life—and of both boys and girls having a strong
male role model—should not be underestimated. It is no
secret that I disagree with my right hon. Friend the Member
for Chingford and Woodford Green (Mr Duncan Smith) on some
policy issues, but the work that he did at the Centre for
Social Justice and the work that my hon. Friend the Member
for Enfield, Southgate (Mr Burrowes) is doing now on the
importance of family relationships and public policy should
not be underestimated.
-
On the issue of working hours, I find in my south-west
London constituency that the bigger determinant is
ethnicity. If people have travelled a long way to get here,
an education is the most important thing for them. In my
experience, their children do exceptionally well whatever
hours they work, because they imbue them with the
importance of education. The young people who go to the
grammar schools in south London, other than the privileged
ones, are overwhelmingly from particular ethnic minorities.
In my experience, that particularly includes children from
the Tamil community.
-
The hon. Lady makes a really interesting point. There is a
broader point, which is that we are sometimes reluctant to
explore too far the differences between different
communities and people from different ethnic backgrounds in
terms of social mobility. She is right, in that anyone
walking around Chinatown on a Saturday morning will see
children sitting there, often in their parents’
restaurants, actually doing their homework. I do not need
to tell the Minister about the successes, particularly in
maths, of students from the far east.
The hon. Lady is absolutely right to talk about drive and
aspiration, and I will come on to aspiration in a moment.
It always struck me when I was Secretary of State for
Education that around the world young people and their
families are fighting for education, and sometimes in this
country we have parents fighting to take their children to
Disneyland. That tells me that education is not given the
importance in everybody’s lives that it should be given. I
suspect that part of the success of the London challenge—it
is difficult to unpick exactly what was behind it, because
there were lots of factors in the London challenge that
made a difference—was due to the diverse ethnic backgrounds
and the importance that people from different ethnic
backgrounds attach to education, and everything that goes
with that.
As I was saying, there are parts of the country that feel
they are very much left behind other parts. That is picked
up in the commission’s report, which also says that
“today only one in eight children from low-income
backgrounds is likely to become a high income earner as an
adult.”
Politicians and the Government have to find a way of
renewing that social contract; otherwise, we are playing
into the hands of those who would feed on the dissent and
take advantage of it at forthcoming elections. That means
that we need to focus on communities and areas where social
divisions are at their widest and where social mobility has
stalled or is going backwards.
Recently, I have been studying the Louise Casey review of
opportunity and integration. We are awaiting the Government
response to it. It is a fascinating report, in which she
says that integration is a key part of a successful
immigration policy. I do not think we have used the word
“integration” in our immigration discussions enough. I do
not expect the Minister to respond to that point, because
he is not a Home Office Minister, but Louise Casey goes on
to say that social mobility is a key part of integration:
“As well as providing economic advantages, social mobility
also provides knock-on benefits such as reducing
grievances, heightening a sense of belonging to a country
or community and increasing geographic mobility and social
mixing too.”
As I said, schools and education are the great driver of
social mobility. It is worth drawing attention again to
what the Social Mobility Commission report says:
“Despite a welcome focus on improving attainment in
schools, the link between social demography and educational
destiny has not been broken”.
The hon. Member for Manchester Central was right to say
that that is not the fault of one Government, but has
happened over successive years. However, it cannot be right
that that link between social demography and educational
destiny has not been broken. The report states that
“over the last five years 1.2 million
16-year-olds—disproportionately from low-income homes—have
left school without five good GCSEs.”
It goes on to say:
“A child living in one of England’s most disadvantaged
areas is 27 times more likely to go to an inadequate school
than a child living in one of the least disadvantaged. Ten
local authorities account for one in five of England’s
children in failing schools.”
We know where the problem is; we must work out how to fix
it. What does that mean in practice? Those of us who have
talked about choice in education must realise that for
families who are surrounded by inadequate schools, “choice”
is a hollow word. There are no good or outstanding schools
in those areas, and the families cannot afford to buy their
way out of poor services or even the transport to a
different area.
The focus on areas is right. In the White Paper that the
Department published last March, “Educational Excellence
Everywhere”, areas of entrenched educational
underperformance were announced, where access to high
quality teachers, leaders and sponsors was insufficient.
They are now opportunity areas and I hope that the Minister
will say more about them in his concluding remarks. It will
be helpful to know the plan for investing in them, the
services that will receive attention and how we will tackle
getting high quality teachers, leaders and sponsors into
them. We can be more directional. That is where Government
can give a lead.
The hon. Member for Mitcham and Morden (Siobhain McDonagh)
said that it is about not just academic attainment but
aspiration. One of my most formative experiences—I have
probably shared it with hon. Members previously—was
visiting a primary school in Lancashire. It was a good
primary school. It would be fair to say that the staffroom
was not inclined towards my politics, but we had a robust
discussion. I was struck by the fact that the headteacher
had moved to this rather nicer area and this good school
from an inner-city primary school. She said of the latter,
“Oh well, those children were never going to be more than
‘requires improvement’”. How can someone write off children
before they reach the age of 11 as never amounting to more
than “requires improvement”? What a waste of human
potential. What a waste for our country. That attitude must
be overcome.
Attitudes in families of, “My child can access a
profession, go to university, get a great apprenticeship”,
even though perhaps the parent did not, should be
encouraged. We must also foster the attitude in schools
that children will fulfil their potential.
-
I believe that all parents aspire for their children, but
some do not know how to make things happen. We know that
doing more homework on more evenings is more likely to get
children to where they aspire to be. The inability to
connect reality and the required work with the aspiration
is a problem.
-
I agree. It is not that parents do not want the best for
their child. If you ask most parents on the birth of a
child, they want their child to be happy, healthy and
successful in life. I will talk about extra-curricular
activities shortly because again, there is a social
injustice in access to those activities. The hon. Lady is
right about support. All the nagging that middle-class
parents do about homework, or chivvying children to read
more books, often does not happen elsewhere, not for lack
of wanting to do it but perhaps because it was not done to
those parents. Going into a child’s school and challenging
teachers is anathema to someone who has had a very unhappy
school experience. Attendance at parents’ evenings is
indicative of the support that children get at home.
Aspiration is about aiming high for young people. I did not
have a chance to look up the name of the school, so I
apologise for not remembering it, but I went to a fantastic
primary school in Northamptonshire, where a high proportion
of children had free school meals, but it was working with
the Royal Shakespeare Company and every child had access to
Shakespeare and his language. I heard the tiniest children
talk about Shakespeare’s characters and watched the older
children perform complicated scenes—I would have had
difficulty remembering all those lines, but they were doing
brilliantly. The headteacher there had high aspirations. He
said, “All my children will be able to do this and benefit
and learn.” They were doing incredibly well.
I pay tribute to the National Association of Head Teachers
for setting up its “Primary Futures” campaign, which is
about getting adults into schools to talk about their
careers and broaden horizons. When I was in the DFE, we set
up the Careers & Enterprise Company. Broadening
horizons, and aspirational and inspirational careers
advice, are important. There will be a difference of
opinion in the House about work experience, which we have
debated. One week’s dry work experience in an office will
not necessarily set the flame alight, but I remember
talking to some apprentices, who told me that a week
at Rolls-Royce, where they could see how
the maths they were learning would be applied in the
workplace, does set the flame alight. People then go back
to school more determined to do better in their maths
classes.
There is a changing labour market. In the article at the
weekend that the hon. Member for Manchester Central and I
wrote, we talked about the number of high-skilled jobs that
will be around. The Teach First briefing says that, by
2022, the British economy is expected to experience a
shortage of 3 million workers to fill 15 million
high-skilled jobs. At the same time, there will be 5
million more low-skilled workers than there are low-skilled
jobs. I did not want to mention the “B” word this
afternoon—it is very nice not to be talking about the
European Union—but, if we are to change our immigration
policy in this country and have fewer people coming in from
overseas, we must ensure that all our young people are
training for the labour market of the 21st century.
That is my problem with the Government’s focus on
introducing more selection. We do not live in a world where
we need only the top 20% or 30% to be highly skilled. We
need everybody to have access to a knowledge-rich,
excellent academic curriculum. A renewed battle over
selection distracts from what is needed in our education to
deal with the demands of a 21st-century labour market, to
give everyone a chance to close social divisions, and to
build a consistently strong school system.
Research from the Education Policy Institute talks about
the negative effects on those who live in the most
selective areas but who do not attend grammar schools. The
negative effects emerge around the point when selective
places are available for around 70% of high-attaining
pupils. The research says that there are five times as many
high-quality non-selective schools in England as there are
grammar schools.
Every child is entitled to an academic curriculum. Like the
Minister, I have seen some great schools in some very
unexpected places. I remember my visit to King Solomon
Academy in London—the Minister will have been there too—and
to the Rushey Mead in Leicester. They have a higher
proportion of children on free school meals but are doing
incredibly well in terms of the exam results they are
achieving. I also pay tribute to the Harris academies and
Ark in Portsmouth.
The hon. Member for Manchester Central mentioned the
secondary heads in Surrey who had written about selection.
The Leicestershire secondary heads, too, wrote to the Prime
Minister and the Secretary of State for Education.
Impressively, every single headteacher in Leicestershire
signed the letter. If the Minister has not seen it, I hope
he can get hold of a copy. One paragraph states:
“As professionals who have dedicated our lives to educating
children across Leicestershire, our concern is for all the
children in our region. Removing the most able pupils in
our schools will have a negative impact on those who
remain. Removing the option of ambitious, all ability
comprehensives, with a scarcity of academic role models,
will impact most particularly on the least affluent and
least able. Therein lies the most significant injustice of
this policy.”
Academic attainment is important and we should set high
aspirations and ambitions for all pupils, but pupils in the
best schools gain something else, and I want all pupils to
gain it. This was one of the things I tried to champion
when I was in the Department for Education. I am thinking
of the character traits—persistence, resilience,
self-confidence, self-esteem—and the values and virtues of
integrity, honesty and whatever it might be, that help to
build a whole pupil. I was at Elizabeth Garrett Anderson
School in north London recently. The school focuses on
building social capital among its pupils. It is conscious
of the fact that its pupils will have to compete with the
independent school down the road. I visited the King’s
Leadership Academy in Warrington, which is a new free
school, now over-subscribed, where behaviour is excellent,
and where aspirations are incredibly high. All the young
people are trained for leadership. Kings Langley School in
Hertfordshire and Gordano School near Bristol are fantastic
schools—I could go on.
Educating young people is about not just what happens in
the classroom, but access to other schemes. I pay tribute
to the former Prime Minister and the current Government for
their focus on the National Citizen Service and other
schemes: social action, volunteering, uniformed activities
such as the cadets, the guides and the scouts, and the Duke
of Edinburgh award. They all help to build up experience
and confidence in young people. Those of us who have been
employers and have interviewed see the ability of some
young people to walk through our door, look us in the eye
and shake us by the hand. Some children are taught that and
encouraged in school, but some are not. These things matter
in helping young people to get on.
I mentioned extracurricular activities. The commission’s
report specifically talks about the effect different social
backgrounds have on how people participate:
“One study found that 43 per cent of children whose mother
had a postgraduate degree had music lessons, compared with
just 6 per cent of children whose mother had no
qualifications. At the age of 11, 85 per cent of children
whose mother had an undergraduate degree participated in
organised sport outside of school, compared with 56 per
cent of children whose mother had no formal
qualifications.”
I was very pleased that in last year’s Budget the then
Chancellor announced funding for a longer school day. It
would be helpful to know what emphasis the Department will
place on that to help schools provide such activities. It
is not necessarily about the schools themselves providing
the activities; it could be enabling all young people in
their schools to take up a place and participate.
-
Mr Burrowes
I very much support what my right hon. Friend says,
particularly about social capital and building character
through education. The Government have committed to a
statutory requirement for relationships education. Many
children, sadly, come from a background of conflict, trauma
and survival. There is now the opportunity to provide them
with the building blocks that others receive outside school
to build resilience, self-esteem and respect for others,
and help to build that character which is so vital for
their future in the long term.
-
I agree with my hon. Friend. I was very pleased to support
his amendment on sex and relationships education, and I am
very pleased that the Government have taken that on board
and accepted an amendment to the Children and Social Work
Bill. He is right to say that. One of the most important
characteristics is resilience, or to use the awful phrase,
stickability and bouncebackability: the ability to deal
with what life throws at them and not be blown off course.
Anything that schools, adult role models and other
organisations can do, in addition to families, to help
young people to develop that characteristic will go at
least part of the way to building the more resilient and
confident young people we need for the 21st century.
I do not think we will all agree with everything in the
commission’s report, but it shows that we have a problem
with social mobility. For those of us who are one nation
politicians, that should make us very uncomfortable. There
is talk of a meritocracy, but the difficulty is this: who
decides who has merit? I would prefer to say that everyone
has potential, but that in some cases the keys to unlocking
that potential are more readily available to some than
others. Today’s debate is about working out what those keys
are and how they are handed out, and about building a
consensus, or perhaps cross-party momentum, on how to do
just that. But it has to be about more than words. Much has
been done by this Government and by previous Governments,
but there is much more to do if we are to show how we are
going to renew our broken social contract and build real
social mobility in this country.
3.48 pm
-
Mr (Sheffield, Hallam)
(LD)
I thank the hon. Member for Manchester Central (Lucy
Powell) and the right hon. Member for Loughborough (Nicky
Morgan) for the cross-party collaboration and work that has
secured this debate on this all-important subject. In
time-honoured Westminster fashion, there is an inverse
relationship between the importance of a subject and the
level of attendance, but that does not mean we should not
persist. I join them, and everyone who has spoken today, in
expressing my condolences to the family and friends of
those injured and killed in yesterday’s horrific attack. I
would like to pay my own heartfelt tribute to, and
admiration for, the emergency services and the police who
work so tirelessly, as they did yesterday, to keep us safe.
There is a choice that hangs like a backcloth to this
debate: do we want to live in a closed society in which
people are, in effect, told to know their place, or do we
want to live in an open society in which people are able to
choose their place? There is, I hope, an unarguable
cross-party consensus that we should aspire to the latter.
I am delighted that the Social Mobility Commission, under
the chairmanship of , produces these
excellent annual reports. I would say that, because I set
up the commission: I announced its establishment on 5 April
2011, and we subsequently legislated for it. On the same
day—it is interesting to look back on this—I announced the
introduction of a new set of indicators that would help
Whitehall to judge whether social mobility was being
progressed or not. I also established a ministerial
committee on the subject, which I chaired for many years.
At the time, all those things were new. Whitehall did not
have a set of indicators, and we did not have a Social
Mobility Commission. Extraordinarily, when I entered the
Government I discovered that there were interns working in
Whitehall and paid by the taxpayer who were judged purely
on the basis of who they knew. Even in the heart of
Government. prior to 2011, people were being given a leg-up
because of who they knew rather than what they knew. It is
fantastic that, in the intervening five or six years,
social mobility has become a regular feature of the annual
cycle of announcements.
I remember the then Prime Minister, , observing to me rather
ruefully that he thought I might have made a mistake by
insisting that a member of the Opposition should chair the
precursor of the Social Mobility Commission, because the
first report produced by and his colleagues
had been critical of something that the coalition
Government had done. I said to him, “That is the whole
point: we need an institution that is independent of
Government and contains people who will be fearless in
their criticisms of any Government of whatever political
persuasion, and which”—this is guaranteed by law—“reports
to Parliament, not to the Government.”
The commission has—I will put it politely—had its wings
clipped a little by the present Government. Shortly after
the last election, the Government announced that they would
remove the child poverty remit from what was formerly
called the Child Poverty and Social Mobility Commission. I
very much hope, and I am sure the Minister will reassure
us, that that is not the first step in an attempt to make
the commission in any way more docile, or less ferocious,
in its all-important work.
I want to dwell on three issues, all of which are touched
on in the report that the commission produced last
November, and many of which have already been touched on by
my co-sponsors. The first, the role of early years support,
was highlighted by the hon. Member for Manchester Central,
to whom I pay tribute, because she has made it a personal
mission and has done so in an admirable way.
I think we all know this intuitively as parents, but,
crucially, over the last decade or so, the academic
evidence —from neuroscience to research done by
educationists—has confirmed the axiomatic importance of
what happens to a child’s brain, a child’s ability to
learn, a child’s willingness to learn, a child’s
willingness and ability to adhere to authority, a child’s
ability to mix with other children, and so on. So much of
that, of course, is formed, or not fostered, in the home,
but a huge amount can be fostered, or neglected, in the
early years and pre-school support that is given to our
children.
There are two matters that concern me slightly. What I am
probably most proud of from my time in government was the
initiative that we took to provide 15 hours a week of
pre-school support for two-year-olds. No Government had
done that before: all early years and pre-school support
had previously been confined to three and four-year-olds. I
was keen for us to act on the evidence that the earlier we
start—and, crucially, the earlier we start with those from
the most deprived families—the greater the multiplier
effect on children’s subsequent educational performance. So
we introduced that measure. It initially applied to
two-year-olds whose families were in the lowest 20% income
bracket, but we later doubled that to 40%. That is where it
stays to this day: there is a 15-hour entitlement for
two-year-old toddlers from families that fall into the 40%
lowest income families category.
The Government have now embarked upon a dramatic expansion
of the entitlement for three and four-year-olds. I say, as
someone who did not get into the bunfight between the two
larger parties in the last general election, that that
was—let us not beat about the bush—frankly because of a
great Dutch auction in which the Labour and Conservative
parties at the last election tried to outdo each other on
how much they could improve the 15-hour entitlement for
three and four-year-olds: at first it was 20 hours, then it
was 25, then 30, and so it went on.
The Government will encounter terrific difficulties in
delivering this expanded entitlement in a sustainable,
high-quality way. That is worrying enough, but, this being
a cross-party debate, I simply make a plea to us all to
pause and consider whether, in a time of constrained
resources when we have to make choices, this is really the
most sensible use of scarce resources, given the importance
of early years. The expansion of a universal entitlement
from 15 hours to 30 hours for three and four-year-olds does
absolutely nothing to build on this ground-breaking
initiative of providing early-years support for
two-year-olds. It also does nothing to bridge a gap that we
will, as a society, have to bridge one day: the gap in a
child’s development, which can be perilous, between the
point at which mum and dad, or mum or dad, go back to work
and the point at which the child can enjoy the state-funded
allocation of early-years pre-school support devoted to him
and her—which, if they do not come from those lower income
families, comes not at two, but at three and four.
We have this gap at that age. I know nothing about
neuroscience, but I am told this is when the brain does the
most extraordinary things and forms at a pace that is
barely repeated at any other point in life—although I am
also told that some neuroscientists say they think rewiring
might happen later, in the early teens. Certainly, judging
by my teenagers, there is a lot of rewiring going on, most
of it devoted to staring at an iPad.
We all know that early-years is one of the most important
engines of social mobility, and we all know that money does
not grow on trees. A decision has been taken—I think
because of a non-evidence-based rush to double up again and
again on a universal entitlement for three and
four-year-olds—not to build on the ground-breaking
initiative provided to two-year-olds. However, the early
evidence—I would love to hear whether the Minister can
share any of the evidence that I assume the Department for
Education is accumulating—shows promising results for the
knock-on effect on the two-year-old entitlement, and we
have this persistent gap between the point at which many
parents have to go back to work and the point at which
their children can be put into a setting where they receive
some of those entitlements.
I therefore make a plea to the Government. I am not for a
moment imagining that they are going to say, “Absolutely,
the right hon. Member for Sheffield Hallam is right and we
will stop entirely the direction of travel and orient
policy in a different direction,” but the challenge
remains. We need to continue to target resources earlier
and at children from the most deprived families, and we are
not doing that right now.
-
Mr Burrowes
In a spirit of consensus, I would point out that one of the
successes of the coalition Government was the focus on
early years and the early years foundation stage, which
came not least out of the work of the hon. Member for
Nottingham North (Mr Allen) and my right hon. Friend the
Member for Chingford and Woodford Green (Mr Duncan Smith).
There is growing evidence, not least through the Department
for Work and Pensions programme on parenting, of the
quality of the relationship between parents having a huge
impact on children’s long-term wellbeing, mental health and
life chances. There should be a focus on that. There is a
lot of well-evaluated evidence from the parents as partners
programmes showing that we need to focus on these quality
relationships all the way through as providing the
foundation for long-term prospects.
-
Mr Clegg
The hon. Gentleman is entirely right. I have gone on a bit
of a journey on this: I have always had a somewhat kneejerk
liberal reaction of slight squeamishness and reticence
about the idea of politicians, the Government, Whitehall
and public policy experts seeking to tweak or improve how
parents choose to raise their children, which I intuitively
think is no business of politicians, but I agree with the
evidence. Much like the right hon. Member for Loughborough,
I agree on almost nothing with the right hon. Member for
Chingford and Woodford Green (Mr Duncan Smith) on many
issues, but on this issue I think that he led the pack in
saying that this is something that politicians need to
grapple with, although we need to do so with care.
The first page of the summary of the report recommends that
the Government should introduce
“a new parental support package, including a guarantee of
help if a child’s 2 to 2½-year check shows that they are
falling behind.”
I entirely agree with that. Public policy is inching
towards greater involvement in an area that many folk have
previously felt should be kept immune from such
interventions.
I want to make one more point about early years that I am
sure everyone here is aware of. It is unglamorous, rather
fiddly and difficult to fix, but it is acutely important:
it is the quality of early years provision. The pay and
status of early years teachers are real problems. We do not
have enough men going into early years teaching. Pay is
very low, and there is no qualified teacher status. As the
Government seek to expand the entitlements for three and
four-year-olds, it is terrifically important that quantity
does not come at the further cost of diminished quality. If
the Minister can tell us how the quality, status and—in the
long run—pay of early years teachers can be improved, so
much the better.
I also want to talk about money. In those glory days back
in 2010, I intervened aggressively in internal discussions
when we had to announce what was in many ways the fateful
comprehensive spending review setting out all sorts of
unappetising cuts. I insisted that the per-pupil and
indexed core budgets for schools should be protected. Those
budgets needed to be protected in terms of prices and of
pupil numbers, not least so that we could then add on the
pupil premium in a meaningful way and ensure that it added
genuine value.
I look now at the trouble the Government are getting into,
and yes, a lot of this is complex. A lot is to do with the
higgledy-piggledy, unjust, idiosyncratic way in which
schools have had their budgets allocated to them over many
decades, but some of it is pretty obvious. The Government
simply cannot cancel the £600 million education services
grant, as they did shortly after the 2015 general election,
while protecting the per-pupil allocation only in cash
terms and not in real terms and while diverting hundreds of
millions of pounds to free schools—many of which are doing
a great job, but frankly, far too many of which have been
opened in places where there is no desperate need for extra
places—and possibly compounding that error by spending
hundreds of millions of extra pounds on new selective
schools, and then ask schools to shoulder their own newly
increased national insurance and pension contributions and,
in some cases, apprenticeship levy costs, and, on top of
that, introduce a national funding formula with no
additional money to make that work. If they do all that,
they are bound to get into terrible trouble.
I do not say this in a spirit of recrimination, but the
Government should not be surprised that they are
encountering huge resistance to these plans across the
House and huge disquiet from parents, headteachers and
governors up and down the country. There is a limit to how
much they can keep expecting improved performance from a
schools system that is being put under those multiple and
entirely self-inflicted financial stresses and strains.
I know a little bit about this because, in the coalition
Government, we looked exhaustively at the case for
introducing a national funding formula. In principle, the
case for doing so is impeccable; of course it is. The
current situation is woefully unfair. There are many
non-metropolitan schools, smaller rural schools, suburban
schools, schools in the shires and so on that have received
far less funding over a long period. However, the problem
is that if we introduce a national funding formula in a way
that does not raise the overall financial tide for all
schools, what happens is exactly what is happening now. The
schools that think they are going to gain pots and pots of
money are disappointed at how little they gain, and those
that are going to lose will lose an unacceptably large
amount of money. No one is pleased.
The one issue in this debate on which I disagree with the
right hon. Member for Loughborough is that, if I understand
it correctly, her solution is to adjust the deprivation
calculation buried within all the numbers in the national
funding formula, which—all credit to the Minister and his
Department—is a bona fide attempt to protect the funding to
the poorest. The right hon. Lady will no doubt correct me
if I am wrong, but one way to try to square the circle is
to take a little money from the deprivation allocation and
raise the floor or the minimum amount—
-
rose—
-
Mr Clegg
Have I got it wrong?
-
The intricacies of the national funding formula are
probably not quite right for this debate, but the right
hon. Gentleman wants to consider the different grades of
deprivation and how they are funded. Of course, there is
the pupil premium outside the national funding formula, but
there is also the income deprivation affecting children
index, or IDACI, which looks not only at the overall
deprivation weighting, but the weighting within the
different deprivation gradients. That needs to be
reconsidered and the Department needs to rerun the numbers.
-
Mr Clegg
I am grateful for that explanation. I will not try to
improve upon the technical proficiency and expertise that
the right hon. Lady has just displayed, because I cannot
match her for that. I hope in many ways that she has just
made my point, which is that we are condemned to fiddling
around in the undergrowth to shift a little bit of money
here or there to try to square a circle.
We came to the conclusion in the coalition—the Minister may
remember—that it is not possible to introduce a national
funding formula in a way that is just and fair if it is not
pump-primed with a lot of money. I cannot remember whether
it was in 2013 or 2014, but we did the next best thing,
which was to use about £400 million as a stopgap
measure—the Minister may have announced it at the time—to
target the underfunding of the most underfunded schools. I
plead with the Minister to learn from the past and, because
I doubt whether any new money will be forthcoming from the
Treasury, do that again. It is not ideal. It is a stopgap.
It is temporary, but it is much better to allocate targeted
resources to the schools that rightly complain about having
been most hard done by under the current funding formula
than to annoy and upset everyone in the way that the
Government appear destined to do if they carry on with
their current trajectory. That is my helpful suggestion for
a way out for the Government from this politically
invidious position in which they find themselves.
My final point has been made already, but it is worth
repeating and relates to the importance of evidence-based
policy. It really should not have to be restated that when
we consider something as precious and as important as how
we design the education system for our children, we should
always be led not by dogma, ideology or personal
hobbyhorses, but by the evidence. I do not want go over
many of the points made earlier, but this old idea of
improved selection perplexes me—that is the politest way of
putting it. No international, national or local evidence
whatsoever is being wheeled out. If the evidence is not
there, let me at least make a political plea: the proposal
is not actually popular with parents. Opinion polls show
that older voters like it, particularly those who remember
grammar schools in the old way, but parents, who actually
have to make invidious choices about where to send their
children, hate it.
The Government appear to have forgotten why previous
Governments, including previous Conservative Governments,
stopped the expansion of selection. It was precisely
because they were encountering such resistance from their
own voters, who do not like it. I ask people in the
Westminster and Whitehall village why on earth we are
proceeding with something that parents do not like, for
which there is no evidence and for which there is no
manifesto commitment at all. I do not remember the
Conservatives populating our television screens in the
run-up to the 2015 general election saying, “And we will
introduce grammar schools.” There is no mandate for it. I
am told—the Minister will not be able to confirm this—that
one unelected political apparatchik in No. 10 went to a
grammar school and has apparently persuaded the Prime
Minister that they are therefore a good idea.
I am sure that it is not as simple as that, but surely it
cannot be the case that the whole of Whitehall is being led
by the nose because of the personal prejudices of one
unelected political appointee in No. 10. I have to put on
record this magnificent quote from Russell Hobby, the
leader of the National Association of Head Teachers,
writing in The Times Educational Supplement:
“In no other sector would this be acceptable. If the
minister for health proposed to increase state funding for
homeopathy on the basis that it did wonders for his uncle’s
irritable bowel back in the 1970s—and must, therefore, be
right for everyone today—there would be an uproar. This is
a precise metaphor for the expansion of grammar schools. It
is educational homeopathy.”
I hope that the Minister, who of course will not be able to
disagree with the new orthodoxy, will none the less
privately go to the Secretary of State for Education, and
to the other powers that be in Whitehall, to stop the
fetish for selection before it gets this Government into
terrible trouble.
Where does the evidence suggest that we should do more? I
am not exactly declaring an interest, but I chair a
cross-party commission for the Social Market
Foundation—there are Labour and Conservative Members on the
commission—and we are looking at some of the key
evidence-based drivers of increases in, and the existence
of, inequality in the education system. One of our most
striking early conclusions from the data we have seen and
our original research—we will be producing a concluding
report in the next month or two—is, I should think,
intuitively obvious to us all, much like the importance of
early years.
There is an intimate relationship between educational
underperformance in some of the more deprived parts of the
country, and the high teacher turnover and lack of
experienced teachers in those schools. It really is very
striking. The proportion of unqualified teachers working in
primary schools with the highest concentrations of pupils
on free school meals is 4%, but it is half that in the most
affluent quintile. There is a similar pattern in secondary
schools, where 5% of teachers in the richest schools, if I
can put it like that, are unqualified, compared with 9% in
the poorest schools. Schools that serve the most
disadvantaged communities also experience far higher levels
of teacher turnover than neighbouring, more advantaged
schools.
This policy challenge, which does not detonate with the
same attention and fury from the media as selection and so
on, is a mundane but, none the less, crucial one. What can
we do to attract highly qualified teachers to those parts
of the country to which they are not presently attracted
and/or to make sure that teachers in those schools stay and
are supported to improve their own experience and
qualifications? The Department for Education is looking at
that, and I very much hope that—as we all continue to
grapple with the elusive problem of how to build an open
society in which people can go as far as their talents,
application and dreams take them, rather than having their
life fortunes determined by the circumstances of their
birth—it is one of the many areas in which the Government
will seek to make a positive intervention in the years
ahead.
4.13 pm
-
(Mitcham and
Morden) (Lab)
I associate myself with the comments of all Members in
relation to yesterday’s incident. It still seems completely
unreal, and my thoughts are with the brave police officer
outside defending us who lost his life just doing his
job—it is hard to come to terms with that. Without
prejudging the person who did this, I suspect that issues
of social mobility might apply here. I particularly
reference Louise Casey’s report on the need for social
integration among all peoples.
I thank the right hon. Members for Loughborough (Nicky
Morgan) and for Sheffield, Hallam (Mr Clegg) and my hon.
Friend the Member for Manchester Central (Lucy Powell) for
securing this important debate. As a girl who went to a
secondary modern, I wholeheartedly support their article in
last week’s Observer making it clear that grammar schools
are not the answer to social mobility.
I was proud to be part of the previous Labour Government,
for whom social mobility and education were absolutely
priorities. Earlier, I was able to give thanks to who, in my assessment,
was one of the best Ministers we ever had. I note today’s
figures on teenage pregnancy rates. The Labour Government’s
efforts to reduce teenage pregnancy were so successful that
those figures suggest that that is at its lowest ever
level.
As the Social Mobility Commission’s “State of the Nation
2016” report sets out, under the current Government we are
slipping back decades on the progress that has been made.
Those born in Britain in the 1980s are the first generation
since 1945 to start their careers on a lower income than
their parents. A child living in one of England’s most
disadvantaged areas is 27 times more likely to go to an
inadequate school than a child in an affluent area. Just 5%
of children who receive free school meals will secure five
A grades at GCSE. Children from low-income homes are 30%
more likely to drop out of education than their wealthier
classmates with similar GCSE grades. Overall, by secondary
school age, pupils on free school meals lag behind their
wealthier counterparts by around 20 months.
For working people in my community, the link between social
class and professional success is more entrenched than
ever. Only one in eight children from low-income
backgrounds is likely to earn a high salary as an adult.
Working-class people make up only 4% of doctors, 6% of
barristers and 11% of journalists—a whole generation of
talent is being frozen out. But I wish to make it clear
that grammar schools are not the answer. A House of Commons
Library research briefing from earlier this month states:
“Pupils at grammar schools are much less likely than
average to…be eligible for free school meals”.
Indeed, only 2.6% of pupils at grammar schools are eligible
for free school meals—a well-understood signifier of
poverty—whereas nationwide 14% of all students are
eligible.
Part of the reason why poor students are so
under-represented at grammar schools is that the attainment
gap between richer and poorer students is clear even when
they are only a few years old. The Library briefing states
that
“of the 6.9% of pupils eligible for FSM with high prior
attainment who are near selective schools, only 2.4%
actually attended a grammar school.”
Let us be clear: grammar schools do not work for even the
very brightest poor students, never mind the average or
below-average student. Grammar schools educate a
minority—just 5%—of state school students, so while the
Government waste time banging on about grammar schools, the
needs of 95% of our state school students are being
ignored.
When I talk about social mobility, I am not just talking
about the brightest poor students; I am talking about the
poor students who are average but who deserve no less to
succeed in life through hard work. We really need to
prioritise comprehensive school education; if we do not, we
will never address the national scandal of white
working-class underachievement in this country.
Let us be clear: underachievement is a class issue and an
ethnic issue. White British boys and girls who receive free
school meals are consistently the lowest performing group
at GCSE level, and the genders show no difference. It is
not about boys; it is about boys and girls. Last year, only
32% of working-class white British students who receive
free school meals achieved the GCSE benchmark, compared
with 44% of mixed-race students, 59% of Bangladeshi
students, 42% of black-Caribbean students, and 47% of
Pakistani students receiving free school meals. Over the
past 10 years, the educational attainment of white
working-class students has improved much more slowly than
that of almost any other ethnic group.
A good school can be life changing. I had the honour of
being on the Education Committee and to play a part in a
report that looked at white working-class underachievement.
What we learned was how much we do not know. The one thing
that stood out is the truism that a poor child does so much
better at a good school. The benefit of being at a good
school is a much more important driver for them.
This is where I get to pay tribute, as always, to the
Harris academy chain in south London. I am forever grateful
to it for having two secondary schools in my constituency.
Last year, Harris Academy Merton achieved some amazing GCSE
results, with a staggering 77% of students achieving five A
to C GCSEs including maths and English, compared with the
national average of just 54%. These schools, not grammar
schools, should be our ideal. The pupil premium needs to be
used to ensure that disadvantaged pupils receive the
focused support that they need. We need to give
academically average students from poor backgrounds better
alternatives to university. Social mobility is about not
just the children at the very top doing well, but all
children being able to aspire and surpass expectations,
including the average and below-average student.
If I have a couple of minutes—I do not want to take any
time from other Members—I would like to address housing in
not only south London, but all of London, as it is a major
dampener on social mobility. If someone is in temporary
accommodation and they live miles away from their home
area, they do not get to school. Every Friday at my advice
surgery, I meet families who are being fined for
non-attendance at school, simply because they now live two
or three hours away from their schools. I have letters that
would make Members cry about clever pupils missing their
exams because they physically cannot get to school to take
them because of their housing situation.
Social housing is not fashionable. It is not something that
everybody will come together about, but unless people have
a secure and consistent roof over their head, the
possibility of their not achieving is huge.
4.22 pm
-
(Ellesmere Port and
Neston) (Lab)
I too wish to associate myself with the comments that have
been made by hon. Members today regarding the tragic events
yesterday. I also send my condolences to the families of
those who lost loved ones in yesterday’s incident.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Manchester
Central (Lucy Powell) and the right hon. Members for
Sheffield, Hallam (Mr Clegg) and for Loughborough (Nicky
Morgan) on securing this incredibly important debate. As
the chair of the all-party group on social mobility, I am
pleased to have the opportunity to debate this very
important issue. I am sure that all Members who attended
this debate will have read the Social Mobility Commission’s
latest report. For those who have not or who are watching
at home, they really should read it, because it represents
an urgent call for action on opportunity and the state of
our nation.
For too long, we have allowed privilege and connections to
override ability and potential. We have failed to recognise
that there is a criminal waste of talent—generation after
generation—and we have mistakenly and unquestionably
accepted the myth that greater economic prosperity means
greater opportunity for all. All those beliefs have been
questioned by this report.
There is a crisis of opportunity. As my hon. Friend the
Member for Manchester Central said, this is a crisis for
everyone; it affects everyone. The motion before the House
calls for the focus to be on improving educational outcomes
for all children. The commission’s report makes it very
clear that if we are genuinely to improve outcomes for all
children, we need to intervene and give them more support
well before they start school.
My hon. Friend set out the issues in this area very well.
We know that by the time students receive their GCSE
results, 32% of the variation in performance can be
explained by indicators observed before the age of five. A
number of studies show that cognitive outcomes vary hugely
among toddlers according to their parents’ socio-economic
group, and that by the age of five that gap has widened
further. Yet much of the debate on social mobility is
centred on attainment at later stages of development—it
feels a little like closing the stable door after the horse
has bolted.
In the past decade, 500,000 children from poorer
backgrounds were not school-ready by the age of five. We
know that, for many, the gap at the age of five will still
be there when they leave school, if it has not widened even
further. If we do not get the building blocks right from
the start, it just makes everything so much harder. The
Social Mobility Commission’s proposal for a guarantee of
help for children shown to be falling behind at the age of
two to two-and-a-half is something that we must take very
seriously.
I found the commission’s comments on early years childcare
interesting, particularly in the context of the
Government’s planned expansion of free childcare to 30
hours a week. From what I have heard from local childcare
providers, it is pretty clear to me that it is going to be
an enormous challenge for them to maintain standards on the
funding that they expect to have available. The commission
has said that a situation is already developing where
poorer children are twice as likely to have access to low
quality childcare than those from wealthier backgrounds
are.
The right hon. Member for Sheffield, Hallam raised a
pertinent issue when he asked whether the emphasis is right
in where the investment goes in early years. I am concerned
that we are heading for a situation where the focus on
fulfilling that pledge on hours of access will override the
important points that are being made about the need for
early years childcare to play a vital role in ensuring that
every child starts school life in the best possible
position. We cannot think it acceptable for there to be an
almost laissez-faire attitude to those most important early
years of a child’s life, when all the evidence tells us
that it could have a profound influence on their life
chances.
Getting those early years right is hugely important, but
once our children leave school they face a world where even
the most talented have huge barriers in front of them. The
all-party parliamentary group on social mobility report on
access to the professions looked at opportunities in law,
finance, the arts, media, medicine, the civil service and,
indeed, politics, and found many similarities between the
evidence we heard and the commission’s findings. Indeed, it
was startling that, whatever the profession, the lack of
opportunity and the reasons for that were often very
similar. Across the board, privilege and opportunity go
hand in hand. The Sutton Trust’s research shows that three
quarters of senior judges attended private schools, as did
more than half the top 100 news journalists and more than
two thirds of British Oscar winners.
One of the areas where we found that the evidence very much
chimed with the commission’s recommendations was in
relation to internships. Research has shown that 50% of
vacancies in law, banking and finance are filled by
graduates who have already worked for that employer in some
capacity. Too often, internships are not just a way to get
a foot in the door, but the only way to get through the
door at all. They have become almost a further compulsory
step into many professions, but by their very nature they
exclude many.
The APPG has recommended a legal ban on unpaid internships
lasting more than one month. We found that not only was
their unpaid nature a barrier, but that many of the
placements are in London, which means that unless someone
is from that area and has parents who can afford to support
them for extended periods, there is no prospect of their
even being able to consider an internship. There needs to
be a fair, transparent and open recruitment process for
such placements as well: we often found that placements
were determined by existing connections—be it family or
business contacts. These placements need to have the same
rigour applied to them as if they were a permanent job;
otherwise, any proposals made on payments may just be
easing the path for those who are already on it.
Another area where we found the evidence remarkably
consistent concerned the aspirations that our young people
have. As the right hon. Member for Loughborough said, it is
often not that families do not want the best for their
children; it is a much more complicated story than that. I
am sure that if I were to speak to a group of children from
poorer backgrounds in most constituencies and asked them
what they wanted to do when they were older, the vast
majority would not say that they wanted to be a doctor or a
lawyer, and certainly not an actor. For too many, the very
notion that they should even consider careers such as those
is almost universally absent. They need role models,
mentors, inspirers—people from their communities who have
been there and done that. We need to inspire kids from an
early age to aim for wherever their abilities and interests
take them. We should not accept that coming from the wrong
part of town means low horizons. Getting a job should mean
following a dream and forging a career, not just simply
working to survive.
We need to develop a mindset within business whereby we
treat social mobility on a par with protected
characteristics in terms of a diverse workforce. We rightly
challenge it when we see minority sections of society not
getting an equal opportunity, and we should do the same
here. We cannot allow the situation to continue where
someone’s background is likely to be the biggest factor in
determining their chances of success in life. The social
mobility index should be rolled out to all employers over a
certain size, so that there is a clear and public record of
what our biggest companies are doing to ensure that
opportunity is there for all.
A study by the Boston Consulting Group for the Sutton Trust
in 2010 found that failing to improve low levels of social
mobility will cost the UK economy up to £140 billion by
2050. In the inquiry, we certainly heard from some
employers who recognised that their business benefited from
having people who were like, and therefore understood,
their customers. Sadly, they were exception rather than the
rule. Businesses need to be persuaded that it is not only
the right thing to do morally, but that it makes sense for
them as businesses.
The media was one area where we felt that companies needed
to do more to appreciate the benefits of having a diverse
workforce. Indeed, only last week the London Evening
Standard provided the perfect example of what is going
wrong with social mobility. Although I am sure the right
hon. Member for Tatton (Mr Osborne) has many talents and a
broad range of skills in a number of areas, does anyone
seriously believe that he has the experience that qualifies
him to be the editor of a daily newspaper? My 15-year-old
son has more recent experience with the daily news, and he
is a paperboy. But there is a serious point here. What kind
of message does this send to those kids who are spending
months and months on unpaid placements in the media? And
this is an issue not just in the media; it is widespread in
the arts and politics as well.
As the right hon. Member for Sheffield, Hallam said, this
country is too closed. It is a country where, far too
often, where we are born and who we are born to define our
life chances. Parents believe that their children will have
less opportunity than they did, and that is a shameful
state of affairs for this country. Automation and
artificial intelligence will only exacerbate the problem,
and we are miles away from even beginning to understand the
social impact that that will have. The only way we will be
able to meet this challenge is by intensive, long-term
Government intervention, over not just the long term of a
Government but the long term of our lives—not just at five
or 15, but at 35 and 50 and so on. The world of work will
change more rapidly than ever before and we need to
recognise that opportunity is something that will need to
be addressed not just in our younger years but throughout
our lives. We have to invest in ourselves throughout all of
our working lives and we will need Government support to do
that. Too often, there is talk about the number of jobs
created, but too little talk about the quality and
permanence of those jobs. Social mobility cannot take place
against the backdrop of an explosion in part-time and
insecure employment.
In conclusion, there have been many fine words today about
the need to improve social mobility, but it is time for us
to listen to the evidence about what works and put those
words into action.
4.32 pm
-
Dr (Ealing Central and Acton)
(Lab)
I associate myself with all the remarks made about the
senseless, horrific events of yesterday, and with the
tributes paid to the people who lost their lives, including
the brave police officer who was defending us all.
It is important that we continue undeterred to debate this
important “State of the Nation” report by the Social
Mobility Commission. I was an academic sociologist before I
came to this place. Having turned into a politician, I
sometimes feel that there is something of a mismatch
between theory and practice. Academics kind of think that
something works if it works in theory, but, as politicians,
we might have the media in our face and have to think of a
quick soundbite, or there might be someone in our surgery
who needs a problem resolved quickly. I am still grappling
with the same questions of social class and life chances
that I grappled with as an academic.
It is important that we all reject the notion that we have
had enough of experts, and part of the reason that I wanted
to speak in this debate is that the people on the
commission are eminent academics and practitioners. I want
particularly to focus on chapter 2, which is on schools. I
am incredibly privileged to represent the constituency I
grew up in. I recall the same schools that I visit now in
the ’80s, when they had buckets strategically positioned to
catch the drips under leaky roofs. Those schools were
transformed under Labour’s Building Schools for the Future
programme: some of them look like spaceships now. My alma
mater, Montpelier Primary School, where I achieved my
lifetime ambition in June 2015 by cutting the ribbon at the
fête, should particularly go on the record.
This morning, the Prime Minister praised London as the
greatest city on earth, and I am proud to be a London MP.
People have mentioned the so-called fair funding formula,
but 70% of London schools will be worse off under these new
arrangements.
In my constituency, school budgets will be down by a
whopping £5,524,197 by 2019—that is 137 teachers. An
average child will receive £485.52 less funding. The
problem is most acute in Acton, where we have wards in some
of the poorest deciles. I will be doing my surgery in Acton
High School tomorrow, and my hon. Friend the Member for
Mitcham and Morden (Siobhain McDonagh) mentioned how people
come along to our surgeries with horrific stories about
their housing conditions—they bring their mobile phones
with pictorial evidence of the conditions they are living
in—and about how they have been shipped far away because of
the bedroom tax. However, Acton High School will be down
£961 per pupil and 26 teachers, and its budget will be down
by £1 million.
The recommendations in chapter 2, on page 53, talk about
how children from poorer backgrounds are experiencing a
worrying drop-off in progress at secondary. The gap in
progress between low-income families and their more
affluent counterparts has been widening year on year since
2012, and we should be very concerned about that. One of
the report’s recommendations is to ensure that funding cuts
do not exacerbate the problem of less well-off pupils
failing to make good progress at secondary, so the idea
that this funding formula is fair is simply laughable.
As has been said, school education does not exist in a
vacuum; the whole context of children’s learning is
important. I was very fortunate to address a conference by
a group called What About the Children?, which deals with
nought to three-year-olds. As a parent, I was lucky enough
to use Sure Start centres. Sure Start was an amazing,
joined-up programme, with education and health services to
give kids a good grounding. But the children’s centres I
used to use now face devastating cuts and closures. We have
also seen cuts in health promotion, with fewer health
visitors. All that is contributing to a picture that is
getting bleaker. It is little wonder that it was revealed
this week that baby teeth removals—extractions of baby
teeth from children!—have gone up 24% in the last decade.
The right hon. Member for Loughborough (Nicky Morgan)
mentioned parents’ evenings. I have to say that because of
the five-hour lockdown yesterday, I managed to miss my
parents’ evening—some people might say, “The lengths people
will go to to get out of parents’ evenings!” However, the
right hon. Lady is absolutely right that all these
things—and having books in the house—make for a positive
learning environment.
There is a lot that could be said about this report.
Chapter 3 goes on to post-16 education and training. I
worry about rising tuition fees. In my seat, I have the
University of West London, and I have had representations
from staff and students that applications are down because
of tuition fees and also because of the vote on 23
June—Brexit has created a climate in which international
students no longer feel welcome. The removal of the nurse
bursary—the university teaches nurses—is also detrimental
to post-16 training and education and to jobs, and chapter
4 talks about jobs, careers and earnings for future
generations.
In their Budget just the other week—it feels like it was
ages ago, but it was only the week before last—the
Government announced not only that they are ploughing on
with their dangerous selective school experiment, but that
they will provide free transport to grammars, which seems
such a misplaced priority at a time of straitened
circumstances.
There is much more that could be said. The eye-catching new
30 hours of free childcare sound good in theory, but try
finding a provider in practice who can live up to that
manifesto pledge by delivering those 30 hours and who
thinks that the funding will be adequate to cover the
increased costs it will incur in my seat. It is like
looking for hen’s teeth. Things are harder than they should
be anyway. In London, families spend £15,700 a year on
average on nursery fees. We all want the holy grail of
affordable, good quality, flexible childcare, but it is a
challenge to find it, to put it mildly. The childcare
proposal is one of those things—like the decision to have
an in/out referendum on Europe—that seem good in a
manifesto but do not measure up to their promise.
Many sociologists these days consider the concept of life
course, and my casework involves people right across the
age range. We heard in the previous debate about the
Equitable Life pensioners. The WASPI women, who were born
in the 1950s, had high hopes for their futures and their
life course, and they feel as though the trajectory of
their lives has been thwarted twice by Tory Government
changes to their pensions.
As everyone has pointed out, there has largely been
consensus in this debate, with its cross-party ethos, and
that is very welcome. Rather than pursuing an academic idea
of making things work in theory, we need to work together
to fix them in practice. It is assumed that every
generation will do better than the previous one, but the
evidence in the Social Mobility Commission’s report
suggests that we are going in the wrong direction.
Yesterday we were faced with lockdown, and we really were
all in it together. At times like that, cross-party
friendships and alliances flourish. Let us continue in this
spirit, and let us heed the warnings and correct our
erroneous direction of travel.
4.41 pm
-
(Wythenshawe and Sale East)
(Lab)
I join hon. and right hon. Members from all parties in the
House in paying tribute to PC Keith Palmer, who gave his
life to protect us, this place and all that it represents.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Manchester
Central (Lucy Powell) and the right hon. Members for
Loughborough (Nicky Morgan) and for Sheffield, Hallam (Mr
Clegg) on securing the debate. My hon. Friend talked about
Government policy, and about the idea of picking the few
who would go from the council house to the Cabinet. Today
might not be a day for humour, but the tale I tell is that
I grew up in a damp two-bedroom council flat in Manchester,
and since I became an MP I have lived in a one-bedroom
ex-council flat in Westminster, so for some people the
trajectory is downhill. I am one of the few in this place
who can say that.
Yesterday, while democracy was being attacked, the Labour
party members in Manchester, Gorton were selecting as their
candidate another council house kid. He was orphaned out of
Pakistan, grew up in abject poverty and worked as a
labourer. After attending night school, he became a police
officer and a solicitor, and he ran his own practice. I
wish Afzal Khan all the very best over the next few weeks
as we approach the election.
The “State of the Nation” report by the Government’s Social
Mobility Commission explained the scale of the challenge we
face in improving social mobility in Britain today. It told
us in no uncertain terms:
“Britain has a deep social mobility problem.”
It identified
“four fundamental barriers that are holding back a whole
tranche of low- and middle-income families and communities
in England: an unfair education system, a two-tier labour
market, an imbalanced economy and an unaffordable housing
market.”
My hon. Friend the Member for Mitcham and Morden (Siobhain
McDonagh) spoke eloquently about that. To say the least,
the Government—and the Minister, who has been sent to
defend the policies that have led us to this point—have
their work cut out for them.
The “State of the Nation” report presented the Government
with a number of proposals on parenting and early years,
schools, post-16 education, jobs and housing, but there is
no evidence so far that the Government have listened to the
proposals. That is why our debate today is so important.
For instance, the report calls on Government to
“set a clear objective for early years services that by
2025 every child is school-ready at five and the child
development gap has been closed”.
As a former teacher, I know that nursery teachers can
predict with 95% accuracy what exam results the children in
their care will attain at key stage 1, key stage 2 and key
stage 3. The report also recommended that the Government
provide
“high-quality childcare to low-income families.”
The Department for Education has given no indication that
it will adopt these plans. In fact, its policies could do
exactly the opposite. The Minister probably needs to tell
us why the Government are not directing resources towards
those who need them the most. The Department will spend
about £1 billion a year on a policy of so-called tax-free
childcare, which will be of the greatest benefit to those
who have £10,000 to spend on childcare. I will give way
right now to any Member in the House if they know a
low-income family who have £10,000 to spend on childcare.
I hope that the Minister will also tell us what the 30
hours of free childcare will actually mean for the tens of
thousands of low-income families who, under the eligibility
criteria, are not actually eligible for the extra
childcare. As the right hon. Member for Sheffield, Hallam
eloquently put it, this policy is in considerable trouble
at the moment. After all, while I am sure the Minister is
growing tired of being reminded of promises in his
manifesto that are being broken, the pledge was clear: the
Conservative manifesto promised that his party would
“give working parents of 3 and 4-year-olds 30 hours of free
childcare”.
This is not just about quantity, but about quality, as the
right hon. Gentleman mentioned.
Our maintained nurseries are under attack, with the future
of many of them in doubt in the next weeks and months.
Labour Members know the immense importance of early years
intervention to improve the life chances of children in
Britain. That is why the Labour Government opened over
3,000 Sure Start centres, and increased education spending
in every year that we were in Government. This Government
just need to follow that example.
There are a number of recommendations on schools in the
report, and I will briefly address them. The right hon.
Member for Loughborough said that education is the key
driver of social mobility. She is a one nation
Conservative. Disraeli said the same on the steps of
Manchester town hall in 1872, so, a century and a half
later, I am looking for a one nation in terms of social
mobility.
First and foremost, the commission made it clear that the
Department’s flagship vanity project to expand academic
selection is wrong. It said:
“We recommend that the Government rethinks its plans for
more grammar schools”.
I know the Minister has been told time and again to rethink
these plans. He will come back to the Dispatch Box in a few
minutes and say that children on free school meals in
grammar schools have a better chance of getting to a
Russell Group university, but it is a false statistic. The
sample of children on free school meals in grammar schools
is so small that it makes nonsense of the statistics. As my
hon. Friend the Member for Mitcham and Morden pointed out,
2.6% of children in grammar schools are on free school
meals, compared with 14% of children nationally.
We have heard a great deal about the White Paper that we
expect to see in the coming weeks. We want the Minister to
commit to basing it not on dogma, but on evidence, and we
want him to abandon the discredited policy of selection.
The Chancellor has made an announcement about a lot of
money for grammar schools, but it seems that there is none
for school budgets. My hon. Friend the Member for Ealing
Central and Acton (Dr Huq) talked about the buckets used
when it rains. I trained as a teacher in the late 1990s,
and I remember going round with buckets. However, by the
time Labour left office, schools had been rebuilt and roofs
had been repaired, while the only thing going through the
roofs were standards.
Cuts to school budgets will make it almost impossible to
deliver on the many recommendations, so we need to think
about the £3 billion that is currently going to be cut from
school budgets across this country during the next few
years. Let us not pursue the divisive policy of selection;
let us fund education properly and come together on
improving mobility. Government is about choice, so let us
make the right choices.
4.48 pm
-
The Minister for School Standards (Mr Nick Gibb)
If I may, I will take a moment to express my personal
gratitude to all the brave men and women who work here every
day to protect us, showing immense bravery—they run towards
danger to keep us safe. Our thoughts are with those who were
injured yesterday, and with the families of those who
tragically lost their lives.
I congratulate my right hon. Friend the Member for
Loughborough (Nicky Morgan), the right hon. Member for
Sheffield, Hallam (Mr Clegg) and the hon. Member for
Manchester Central (Lucy Powell) on securing this debate. I
agree with all the speakers in this debate about the
importance of improving social mobility in this country,
which is why the Secretary of State has demanded that social
mobility should sit at the very heart of everything the
Department for Education does.
The Government have already done a huge amount in our
determination to achieve that. The pupil premium ensures that
schools are given additional funds to support disadvantaged
pupils. We are delivering 30 hours of free childcare for
three and four-year-old children of working parents. We have
begun our pioneering work in 12 opportunity areas, where we
will partner with local communities to drive social mobility.
Teach First is now sending even more high-quality graduates
to work in areas of high deprivation. We have introduced a
£75 million teaching and leadership innovation fund to
improve professional development for teachers in
disadvantaged areas. Our school reforms have led to 1.8
million more children having a good or outstanding school
place than in 2010, helping to ensure that they get the
education they need and deserve. The number of children
studying the combination of academic subjects that make up
the English baccalaureate has risen from just over one fifth
to nearly two fifths, ensuring that more pupils have access
to the broad academic education that they need. The
Government are transforming technical education, with new
T-levels adding prestige and raising quality for students.
I listened carefully to what the right hon. Member for
Sheffield, Hallam said about early years. The Department’s
ambition is to ensure that the circumstances of a child’s
birth do not determine what they can achieve in life. We are
delivering 30 hours of free childcare for three and
four-year-old children of working parents. We have laid out
our strategy to improve the quality of the early years
workforce by improving access to high-quality professional
development. We have introduced the two-year-old offer to
allow disadvantaged two-year-olds to attend early years. I
pay tribute to the right hon. Gentleman with regard to that
policy.
Crucially, the introduction of systematic synthetic phonics
and the accompanying phonics screening check have seen a
dramatic rise in early literacy. This year, 147,000 more
six-year-olds are on track to becoming fluent readers than in
2012. Phonics is our most potent weapon in our fight to close
the intolerable gap in literacy between the most
disadvantaged children and the more affluent.
The Government have been unapologetic in their unrelenting
push to raise educational standards. Nearly nine in 10
schools are rated by Ofsted as good or outstanding, but there
is still more to do. More than 1 million children still
attend a school that is not yet rated good. The Government
want every parent in the country to have the choice of a good
school place for their child. That is why we will create more
good school places, harnessing the resources and expertise of
universities, faith schools and independent schools, and
lifting the ban on selective school places.
We do not think it is fair that children have the opportunity
to go to an academically selective school only if they live
in a particular county in England, when 98% of grammar
schools are good or outstanding. We know that selective
schools are vehicles of social mobility—I accept that that is
for those pupils who attend them—and almost eliminate the
attainment gap between pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds
and their peers. That is one argument, but there are many
others. Pupils in grammar schools make significantly more
progress than their similarly able peers, with Progress 8
showing an aggregate score of plus 0.33 for grammar schools,
compared with a national average of 0. The House will also be
aware that 78% of high-ability children who leave primary
school with a level 5 in their SATs go on to achieve the full
EBacc suite of GCSEs if they go to a grammar school, but only
53% achieve that if they go to a comprehensive. That is why
we want to ensure that children from disadvantaged
backgrounds and ordinary working families have the
opportunity to benefit from selective schools. We also want
to ensure, as we set out in the consultation document, that
selective schools work with neighbouring primary and
secondary schools to the benefit of all pupils.
As the Social Mobility Commission report sets out, there are
“social mobility coldspots” across the country that are
falling behind. Twelve of those areas have been designated as
opportunity areas by the Secretary of State, building on the
work of my right hon. Friend the Member for Loughborough. We
will target interventions in those areas that are designed to
improve opportunity and choice for pupils. Those opportunity
areas will enable us to identify new approaches to tackling
the root causes of educational disadvantage. We will build an
evidence base of what works so that we can transfer those
approaches to other areas to remove the barriers to social
mobility.
As the Social Mobility Commission recognises, the single
biggest educational factor that improves social mobility is
the quality of teachers, so we intend to invest in the
profession. We will invest a substantial proportion of the
£70 million for the northern powerhouse schools strategy in
piloting new approaches to attracting and retaining teachers
in the north of England, and we will target the £75 million
teaching and leadership innovation fund at improving
professional development for teachers where that can make the
most difference.
Thanks to the academy and free schools programme, teachers
and headteachers have enjoyed greater freedoms to tackle poor
behaviour and raise expectations in the curriculum. Teachers
have been instrumental in setting up some of the highest
performing and most innovative free schools in areas of
disadvantage.
Last month, I visited Reach Academy Feltham, run by Teach
First ambassador Ed Vainker. I was struck by his passion as
he explained the lengths to which he and his school go to
ensure that they attract as many pupils from disadvantaged
backgrounds as possible. Reach Feltham’s determination to do
everything it can to admit pupils from disadvantaged
backgrounds is an example of a school with a mission to drive
social mobility. That free school and other innovative
schools show what it is possible to achieve.
Whether it is Reach Feltham, Michaela Community School, City
Academy Hackney, King Solomon Academy, which my right hon.
Friend the Member for Loughborough mentioned, or Harris
Academy Merton, which the hon. Member for Mitcham and Morden
(Siobhain McDonagh) mentioned, where 39% of pupils are
entered for the EBacc suite of GCSEs, they all understand the
importance of knowledge and teach a stretching,
knowledge-rich curriculum. Each of those schools has clear
routines that are consistent in all classrooms. They
understand the importance of a strong approach to behaviour
management. They all serve disadvantaged communities,
demonstrating that high academic and behaviour standards are
not and must not be the preserve of wealthy pupils in
independent schools or socially selective comprehensive
schools.
-
Is not my right hon. Friend demonstrating in the second half
of his speech why the first part about reintroducing
selection is a red herring? He has just given examples of
several hugely impressive schools, with pupils from
disadvantaged backgrounds who are achieving excellent
results. Does he not agree that we want more such schools
rather than accepting that schools cannot always achieve that
and therefore taking pupils out to put them into selective
education?
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Mr Gibb
We want to leave no stone unturned. The purpose of the Green
Paper that we published in September is to ensure that we
harness all the expertise and talent in this country, whether
in universities, independent schools, faith schools,
outstanding comprehensive schools or selective schools to
ensure that we have more good school places. There are still
problems that we have to address.
According to the Sutton Trust, just 53% of high-ability
children who are eligible for the pupil premium take triple
science GCSEs, compared with 69% of non-free-school-meal
children. Some 20% of high-ability free school meal children
are at schools where triple science is not even offered. We
are trying to tackle those issues, and we are leaving no
stone unturned.
We are also addressing technical education. We are spending
£500 million a year on improving technical education and we
will deliver the recommendations of ’s review in full.
Those new T-levels will replace 13,000 or so different
qualifications.
As right hon. and hon. Members argued in their article, our
country and economy are changing fast. We must ensure that
all pupils, irrespective of background, receive an education
that gives them opportunity and choice in their adult life.
We should all be able to agree that social mobility should be
about not where a person starts, but where they end up.
A few weeks ago, I visited Michaela Community School in
Wembley, a new free school committed to improving the
education of those from the most disadvantaged backgrounds.
Every day at lunch all the pupils recite in unison one or two
of the poems that they have learnt by heart. When I was
there, they recited William Henley’s “Invictus”, which
reflects the determination and stoicism that is fostered at
Michaela Community School:
“Out of the night that covers me,
Black as the pit from pole to pole,
I thank whatever gods may be
For my unconquerable soul.
In the fell clutch of circumstance
I have not winced nor cried aloud.
Under the bludgeoning of chance
My head is bloody, but unbowed.”
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House notes the contents and recommendations of the
annual State of the Nation report from the Social Mobility
Commission; notes that despite welcome measures by successive
governments to improve social mobility the Commission warns
that social mobility is getting worse, the reasons for which
are deep-seated and multi-faceted; and calls on the
Government to lead a renewed approach in the early years, in
education, skills and housing, to improve social mobility.
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