On Thursday (24th August, 2017), pupils will receive their GCSE
results – which include the first set of results for English and
maths under the new grading system. These new qualifications,
designed to be more demanding, will see pupils achieve grades on
a new 9-1 scale – with the Government defining a grade 5 as a
‘strong pass’.
In this major new report, in partnership with UCL Institute
of Education, we have identified what these new grades mean
in terms of a world class education system and how far
education in England needs to improve to match the highest
performing countries in the world. You can read the full
report English Education: World
Class? here
The report uses the latest international PISA data in order to
identify a ‘world-class standard’ (based on the performance of
the highest attaining countries) and consider the performance of
pupils in England in relation to the new standard – the results
are represented in both current and new GCSE grading systems. The
report also looks at how different parts of the country are
performing, as well as examining how far behind Scotland, Wales,
and Northern Ireland are in relation to the new standard.
Key findings
England vs. the new world-class standard
Overall performance
Looking at average overall attainment, we find that England’s
education system needs to undergo significant improvement if it
is to keep pace with the world’s best education systems:
-
To match the highest performing countries in the world,
pupils in England must, on average, achieve a ‘strong pass’ in
maths and English – this is a grade 5 under the
new GCSE grading system (and the equivalent of a high C or low
B grade under the old system).
- Applied to all subjects, this would require a total score of
50 points under the new ‘Attainment 8’ measure. For
England to match the world’s best, we estimate that half of all
pupils would need to achieve an overall score of 50 points or
higher across Attainment 8 subjects.
- In 2016, less than 40 per cent of pupils in state-funded
schools in England achieved this world-class
standard. To equal the highest performers England
would therefore need to make up a lot of ground, increasing
this figure by a quarter – or an additional 60,000
pupils.
- The proportion of pupils reaching the new
world-class standard is around 20 percentage points lower than
the historic 5+ A*-C (including English and mathematics)
measure.
Performance in Maths
England faces an immense challenge in maths if it wishes to be on
a par with the highest performing countries, such as Singapore,
Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan, and Japan:
- To match their average performance, under the new GCSE
grading system, the average grade in England
will need to increase by around two thirds
per student – an increase from 4.7 to 5.4.
-
The number of top performing pupils (those securing an
A*- B grade) would need to increase by over a third
– an additional 96,000 pupils.
-
Crucially, the number of low performing pupils (those
failing to secure a C grade) would almost need to be cut in
half – or reduce by 60,000 pupils.
Performance in Reading
Reaching the world-class standard for English would require
smaller, yet still significant, improvements in pupils’
performance at GCSE level:
-
England’s average English language grade will also need
to increase – from around 4.7 to 4.9 points under
the new grades.
-
The number of top performing
pupils (achieving an A*- B
grade) would need to increase by a sixth
– an extra 42,000 pupils – to match
the highest performing countries in native language reading
– Singapore, Hong Kong, Canada, Finland and the
Republic of Ireland.
-
Those performing at the lower end of the
scale (pupils failing to secure a C
grade) would also need to decease by over a
quarter. This means the number also needs to fall
by 42,000.
Performance in Science
-
For top attaining pupils in
science (those achieving 5 points – a ‘strong
pass’ – or higher) – the number of pupils needs to
increase by just over an eighth to catch up with the highest
performing countries – an increase of 48,000
pupils.
-
More critical to developing England’s performance in
science to a world-class standard is improving the grades of
the lowest-attaining pupils. To match the world’s
best, England needs also to reduce the proportion
of pupils scoring 4.5 points or below by just under a
sixth – a reduction of around 36,000 pupils.
Comparing different areas in England
Nearly all local authorities fail to get at least half of their
pupils to the world-class standard – with great variation within
this level of performance:
-
136 out 150 local authorities fail to get half of their
pupils achieving on average a ‘strong pass’ – a
total of 50 points under the new system.
-
Of the 14 areas where at least half of pupils reach or
exceed the world-class standard, we find that most of these are
academically selective – meaning that the
performance in these areas is skewed by the selection of
high-attaining pupils.
-
Areas such as the Isle of Wight, Knowsley, Blackpool,
and Nottingham are significantly behind – with
the proportion achieving on average a ‘strong pass’ at just
over a quarter. In London, in contrast, 45 per cent of pupils
achieved the world-class standard.
- As expected, attainment is similarly low in the government’s
‘Opportunity Areas’, where on average, less than a third of
pupils achieved the world-class standard in 2016.
Comparing England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern
Ireland
Our findings starkly uncover the extent of Wales’ poor
performance – and the huge distance between it and the
world-class standard:
- Examining how well other UK nations perform, we
find that Wales’ performance in maths is significantly lower than
England’s – just 38 per of cent pupils
are high attainers, achieving the equivalent of an
A*- B GCSE grade. This compares with Scotland (44 per cent) and
Northern Ireland (43 per cent).
-
To keep pace with the world’s best in maths, Wales
would therefore need to drastically improve the number of top
performing pupils it has – by over a
half. Scotland and Northern Ireland would each
need to increase theirs by over a third.
- At the lower end of the attainment scale, all UK nations face
a huge task in reducing the proportion of pupils struggling to
secure a grade C. Once again, Wales faces the
biggest challenge – to meet the world-class standard in maths it
would need to cut the number of low performing pupils in
half – while the required reduction in Scotland and
Northern Ireland is just under a half.