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Mind
the gap:
child poverty and educational attainment
The
observation that children from poorer backgrounds do worse in terms
of educational outcomes was first highlighted in Rowntree’s investigation
into poverty in York at the turn of the twentieth century. A hundred
years on, gaps in educational attainment between children from rich
and poor families continue to be marked, and an increasing focus
of government policy. The recent White Paper, Higher Standards,
Better Schools for All, acknowledges that ‘a child’s educational
achievements are still too strongly linked to their parents’ social
and economic background – a key barrier to social mobility’. [Footnote
1] The debate continues, however, about whether the
current direction of government policy towards increased choice
and competition is the most appropriate one for reducing the attainment
gap and promoting the achievement of the poorest. Here, Jo Blanden
and Sandra McNally provide an overview of the evidence before
addressing the really important question: what should be done?
How
wide is the attainment gap?
What
can be done?
Conclusions
References
Attainment gaps
are so important because educational achievements are crucial in
determining individuals’ prospects. Even having low-level qualifications
can substantially reduce the probability of unemployment or worklessness
(the major cause of poverty) and higher level qualifications increase
individuals’ earning power. Helping those from disadvantaged backgrounds
achieve at school is, therefore, seen as a clear route to enable
children to escape a poor start in life and avoid an inter-generational
cycle of disadvantage. In addition, it is important for national
productivity; only by helping all children obtain the skills they
need in the workplace can we ensure that the whole economy performs
to its potential.
How
wide is the attainment gap?
Despite many recent articles on this topic, there is still a shortage
of evidence on the current size of the attainment gap among children
in the UK. Historically, very few studies have collected really
good data on children’s family background (and, in particular, family
income) alongside information on their education attainments. Many
of the articles referred to here rely on evidence from the British
Cohort Studies, which collected rich information on children born
in 1958 and 1970. The disadvantage of these surveys is, of course,
that they are rather out of date. A recent development is the availability
of pupil-level administrative data on key stage score results (the
National Pupil Database). This provides very detailed and accurate
information on children’s attainment in school. What it unfortunately
does not contain is good information on family background. Ethnicity
is available, but the only information closely connected to disadvantage
is whether children are eligible for free school meals. Comparing
these students with all others is an extremely crude way of measuring
the attainment gap.
The good news
is that improvements to data sets are being made all the time. For
example, the Longitudinal Study of Young People in England will
provide additional information on family background (as well as
much other information) for a sample of students in England and
it will be possible to link this to pupil-level administrative data
sets. The ALSPAC survey of children in the Bristol area is beginning
to yield some results; and the Millennium cohort of babies born
in 2000 offers great possibilities for the future.
Despite
the limitations of the data currently available, a number of key
facts have emerged about the educational attainment of poorer children.
The first of these is that educational disadvantage starts from
a very young age. Feinstein uses data on the 1970 cohort and finds
significant gaps between children from a high and low socio-economic
background on an index of development, which is derived from tests
of ability (at 22 months) in cube stacking, language use, drawing
and personal development. [Footnote
2] The second fact is that the test score and attainment
gap tends to widen as children age and through the levels of the
education system. Feinstein maps the development of children from
22 months to 10 years old, and shows that the gaps between high
and low socioeconomic status children widen out slightly from 22
months to five years and then more substantially from age five to
10, over the first years of school. Feinstein’s findings appear
to be supported by school-level information compiled by the Department
for Education and Skills (DfES), which shows that the gap between
average attainment at schools of low and high disadvantage (as measured
by the percentage of pupils eligible for free school meals) rises
as pupils move through the key stages. [Footnote
3]
Combining
the initial gap in early cognitive ability with the apparent growth
in the attainment gap through the educational system leads to substantial
differences in final attainment levels between children from high
and low socioeconomic backgrounds. Of those in the 1970 cohort (included
in the British Cohort Study), some 26 per cent failed to achieve
any O levels or equivalent by the age of 30, whilst 23 per cent
went on to get a degree. Among children from the poorest 20 per
cent of households at age 16, only 11 per cent went on to get a
degree and 41 per cent failed to achieve any O levels. [Footnote
4] More recent data from the 2000 Youth Cohort Study
compares the proportions of young people staying on at school with
parental background. Payne finds that 82 per cent of young people
from managerial and professional backgrounds stayed on in education
after the age of 16 in the late 1990s, compared with 60 per cent
of those from semi-skilled and unskilled backgrounds. [Footnote
5]
A
question that has been increasingly explored in the literature is
whether the attainment gap has grown over time. This is obviously
a question of high policy concern, as it is often interpreted as
‘Are we getting it right?’ In some sense this interpretation is
misplaced as much of the evidence is once again somewhat out of
date, relying as it does on cohorts going through the education
system from the 1970s to the 1990s. Blanden, Gregg and Machin explore
this question by comparing the proportion staying on post-16 and
the degree graduation rates of the richest and poorest groups over
time. [Footnote 6] They
find that while the poorest groups have begun to catch up in terms
of their chances of staying on beyond 16, there remains a stubborn
gap in participation at university level between children from the
richest and poorest income groups. Among those reaching age 18 in
the late 1990s, children of parents who are in the poorest fifth
of the population compare extremely unfavorably in terms of educational
outcomes to children of parents in the richest fifth of the population.
In the former group, only 9 per cent of children graduate university
by age 23. This compares with 46 per cent of children in the latter
group.
The
DfES has very recently presented evidence on current trends in the
attainment gap (based on defining disadvantaged children by their
eligibility for free school meals). [Footnote
7] The initial figures are promising, showing the greatest
improvement between 1998 and 2004 in the average key stage 2 results
of primary schools with the largest numbers of disadvantaged pupils.
Subsequent analysis, however, reveals that this conclusion is not
robust to using alternative measures of attainment; nor does the
data show faster improvement among all pupils eligible for free
school meals compared with those who are not. The most appropriate
interpretation to put on the figures is that little has changed
since New Labour came to power.
What
can be done?
It is clear that considerable gaps in attainment are found at all
stages in the education system, with little evidence to indicate
that they are declining. In order to understand what can be done
about these gaps, it is essential to pinpoint
what generates them. If the gaps are the direct consequence of income
inadequacy then redistribution to reduce child poverty will be a
successful route to reduce educational inequality and break inter-generational
cycles of disadvantage. Alternatively, the relationship between
parental income and educational attainment may operate through many
other factors, including parental education and motivation, and
child ability. In this case redistribution may be less successful.
It
is extraordinarily difficult to separate out the precise causes
of the attainment gap and to quantify the extent to which it is
driven by income in itself. Blanden and Gregg attempt to estimate
the size of the causal impact of parental income on education, and
find that while income has a statistically significant impact, it
is small compared with the overall association between these variables.
[Footnote 8] This implies
that redistribution will have a limited impact on closing the gap
in attainment between children from different family income backgrounds.
Gregg, Waldfogel and Washbrook offer a more positive interpretation
of the role of redistribution, finding that income gains for poor
parents from benefit rises are spent disproportionately on children’s
goods such as children’s clothing, books and toys. [Footnote
9] Of course, this does not prove that such expenditures
will help overcome poor children’s underachievement. Overall, the
evidence on the benefits of redistribution is not that strong, although
more research is needed to understand fully which characteristics
of poor families lead to their children’s weaker performance.
Apart from redistribution,
what other policies can be used to reduce the attainment gap? Obvious
candidates are interventions that act directly on children’s experience
of the education system. There are various possibilities here. These
include: increasing the opportunity for disadvantaged children to
go to the best schools; directing resources to schools attended
by disadvantaged children; and ensuring that teaching practices
are of the highest quality and enabling the recruitment and retention
of high-quality teaching staff.
With
regard to the first issue, there has been much attention focused
on the role of ‘choice’ in improving educational opportunities.
One might think that people living in disadvantaged areas are in
a position to benefit from this. However, there is evidence to suggest
that high socioeconomic groups have better information on, and understanding
of, school performance, for example via league tables. [Footnote
10] They also have the means to live near high performing
schools and this is reflected in house prices. [Footnote
11] Since schools can select pupils based on location
(if they are over-subscribed), greater choice can, in principle,
lead to greater segregation. This might have a knock-on effect on
pupil performance to the extent that peer groups matter or that
other aspects of the school environment are affected. Hence, children
from different socioeconomic groups are not equally affected by
measures to improve choice: higher income buys greater choice. One
could attempt to make the system fairer by breaking this link (for
example, by forcing schools to abide by a particular admissions
policy not linked either directly or indirectly to income). While
proposals in the White Paper allow greater flexibility to schools
in their choice of admissions policy, it is unlikely that a fairer
system can be introduced wholesale on a voluntary basis. Schools
have an incentive to obtain the highest performing intake since
parents and policy makers watch the performance tables, and schools
are judged accordingly. However, one simple thing that could be
done to improve the educational opportunities for the least well
off would be forcing schools to adopt an admissions policy that
did not discriminate on the basis of income-related criteria (i.e.,
location and academic ability).
Schools
that admit pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds may be expected
to encounter problems than other schools do not have to face if,
for example, problems of social disadvantage manifest themselves
in particular educational or behavioural difficulties. Currently,
local education authorities with a high proportion of disadvantaged
students (as indicated by the percentage of students eligible for
free school meals) receive greater funding from central government.
How much of this funding gets passed directly to schools with more
disadvantaged pupils? How will the reforms encouraging greater decentralisation
impact on this? We do not know the answers to these questions. However,
there is evidence to suggest that when schools with more disadvantaged
pupils do get extra funding, this can make a difference to how well
students perform. For example, Machin et al recently produced an
economic evaluation of the ‘Excellence in Cities’ policy. [Footnote
12] This involved giving schools in disadvantaged areas
extra resources to implement particular programmes. Among the principal
components were: the provision of learning mentors to help students
overcome educational or behavioural problems; learning support units
to provide short-term
teaching and support programmes for difficult students; and a programme
to provide extra support for 5-10 per cent of pupils in each school
who were considered gifted or talented. The evaluation shows that
the policy was effective for schools with a high proportion of students
eligible for free school meals.
Specifically,
for a 4.4 per cent increase in expenditure per pupil it has delivered
a 2.9-4.8 per cent increase in the number of pupils achieving the
government target or better in maths at key stage 3 for the most
able pupils in schools with the highest rate of deprivation. This
policy is an example of a successful attempt to raise standards
in deprived areas and shows that resources, when properly directed,
are a good use of public money.
Of
course, there are other policies, such as education action zones,
that have been far less successful, nor were similar policies in
France and the US. [Footnote 13]
However, the evaluation studies point to various problems in the
programme design or implementation that explain these failures.
Hence, one needs to think very carefully about how to implement
resource-based programmes (and evaluate them). For example, one
interesting contrast between a successful policy in Israel [Footnote
14] and an unsuccessful one in the US [Footnote
15] is that in the former, targeted students were given
lessons after the normal school day taught by their own teachers,
whereas in the latter students were taken out of their regular classes
to receive additional instruction and these classes were often taken
by inexperienced teacher aides.
Most
education programmes require extra resources and, if well implemented,
can have a positive impact on children from disadvantaged backgrounds.
However, not all programmes need be very resource intensive. The
National Literacy and Numeracy Strategies were introduced in the
late 1990s in response to a perception of low standards in the teaching
of literacy and numeracy in schools. Key components of these strategies
were a dedicated daily literacy and numeracy hour and the provision
of a ‘framework for teaching’ these subjects. The quantitative evaluation
of the literacy hour shows that this policy was important in raising
educational standards at key stage 2 at a very low cost (mainly
involving a few days of teacher training). [Footnote
16] Hence, education policy can also improve standards
by facilitating the adoption of high quality teaching practices.
Conclusions
In conclusion, there is a strong link between child poverty and
educational outcomes. The problem has not gone away as Britain has
become richer: if anything, the link appears to be stronger now
than in the past. While there is no magic solution to these deeply
ingrained problems facing poor families, there is evidence that
some policies can be beneficial. In particular, the impact of the
policies embodied in the Schools White Paper will depend very much
upon whether the Government can distribute the potential benefits
evenly and prevent better-off parents from obtaining the lion’s
share.
Sandra
McNally is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Economic Performance,
London School of Economics and Deputy Directory of the Centre for
the Economics of Education.
JO Blanden is a lecturer at the University at Surrey and
research associate at the Centre for Economic Performance.
References
1.
Department for Education and Skills, 2005, p. 1 [back
to text]
2.
F Feinstein, ‘Inequality in the Early Cognitive Development of British
Children in the 1970 Cohort’, Economica 70, 2003, pp. 73-97
[back to text]
3.
Department for Education and Skills, Investment for Reform: 2002
Spending Review, 2002 [Back to text]
4.
J Blanden and P Gregg, ‘Family Income and Educational Attainment:
a review of approaches and evidence for Britain’, Oxford Review
of Economic Policy 20, 2004, pp. 245-264 [back
to text]
5.
J Payne, Patterns of Participation in Full-time Education After
16: an analysis of the England and Wales Youth Cohort Study,
Department for Education and Skills Research Report 307, 2001 [back
to text]
6.
J Blanden, P Gregg and S Machin, ‘Educational Inequality and Intergenerational
Mobility’, in S Machin and A Vignoles (eds) What’s the Good of
Education?, Princeton University Press, 2005 [back
to text]
7.
Department for Education and Skills, ‘Has the Social Class Gap Narrowed
in Primary School?’ A background note to accompany the talk by Rt
Hon Ruth Kelly MP, Secretary of State for Education and Skills at
the Institute for Public Policy Research, 26 July 2005 [back
to text]
8.
See note 6 [Back to text]
9.
P Gregg, J Waldfogel and E Washbrook, ‘That’s The Way it Goes: expenditure
patterns as real incomes rise for the poorest families with children’
in J Hills and K Stewart, A More Equal Society? New Labour, poverty,
inequality and exclusion, The Policy Press, 2005 [back
to text]
10.
A West and H Pennell, ‘School Admissions: increasing equity, accountability
and transparency’, British Journal of Education Studies 46,
1999, pp. 188-200 [back to text]
11.
S Gibbons and S Machin, ‘Valuing English Primary Schools’, Journal
of Urban Economics 53, 2003, pp. 197-219; L Rosenthal, ‘The
Value of Secondary School Quality’, Oxford Bulletin of Economics
and Statistics 65, 2003, pp. 329-355 [back
to text]
12.
S Machin, S McNally and C Meghir, Excellence in Cities: evaluation
of an education policy in disadvantaged areas, DfES, 2005 [back
to text]
13.
R Bénabou F Kramatz and C Prost, The French Zones d’Education
Prioritaire: Much Ado About Nothing? CREST-INSEE, 2005; W Van
der Klaauw, Breaking the Link Between Poverty and Low Student
Achievement: does Title 1 work? University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill, 2005 [back to text]
14.
V Lavy and A Schlouser, ‘Targeted Remedial Education for Underperforming
Teenagers: costs and benefits,’ Journal of Labour Economics,
forthcoming [back to text]
15.
W Van der Klaauw – see note 13 [back
to text]
16.
S Machin and S McNally, The Literacy Hour, Institute for
the Study of Labor Discussion Paper 1005, 2004 [back
to text]
Poverty
123, Winter 2006
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