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New grammar schools will not increase social mobility, report finds

Opening new grammar schools is unlikely to boost education standards or increase social mobility, a major study released today has revealed.

Research by the Education Policy Institute shows that high performance of pupils at grammar schools, in comparison to those at non-selective schools, is driven by the “very high prior attainment and demographics of pupils in grammar schools”.

The analysis also failed to find a “significant positive impact” of grammars on social mobility, and has cemented the view that poorer pupils and those with SEN or a first language other than English are less likely to attend selective schools.

EPI grammar schools report: the 7 key findings
EPI grammar schools report: the 7 key findings

The findings come at a critical time for a government attempting to convince the country, and some of its own MPs, that an expansion of selection in England is needed, and are likely to be used to bolster the Labour Party’s campaign against the plans at its conference in Liverpool, where leader Jeremy Corbyn will attack the government’s proposals in his speech.

Proponents of the expansion of the grammar system, including the prime minister Theresa May and education secretary Justine Greening, have argued they want to use it to improve educational outcomes of poorer pupils, but the EPI’s research failed to find a significant positive impact on social mobility made by grammar schools.

David Laws (pictured), the former schools minister and chair of the EPI, said: “It is clear from our analysis that creating additional grammar schools is unlikely to lead to either a significant improvement in overall education standards or an increase in social mobility.

“Indeed, without far more success in getting poor children into grammar schools, the total attainment gaps between poor children and richer children could well increase.”

Creating additional grammar schools is unlikely to lead to a significant improvement in social mobility

He said far too few children from lower-income families attended grammar schools, which the research put down to the fact that, by the time the 11-plus is taken, 60 per cent of the disadvantaged attainment gap – equivalent to 10 months of learning by this stage – has emerged.

He added that there was a risk that pupils in areas with large numbers of selective places, more grammar schools would “reduce the results achieved by poorer children” on average.

“What our research also demonstrates is that able pupils will perform just as well at high quality non selective schools, and these schools are much better than grammar schools at serving children from all backgrounds.

Angela Rayner and Jeremy Corbyn
Angela Rayner and Jeremy Corbyn

“The government says, of course, that it wants grammar schools to take more pupils from lower income backgrounds – but it is far from clear how this would be achieved in practice.”

Angela Rayner, the shadow education secretary, said the evidence in the report was “clear” that “grammar schools do not aid social mobility.

“This report demonstrates, once again, that grammar schools only take a tiny number of pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds,” she said.

“The truth is that results and performance in every school, not just in grammars, have far more to do with a child’s background than anything else. That’s why we need an education policy for all our children, not just a tiny minority in grammar schools.”

The report has sparked a call from the National Association of Head Teachers for the government to scrap its plan for new grammar schools and invest in early years.

Russell Hobby, the union’s general secretary, said: “This report should be a concern for ministers if they are intent on improving social mobility. It clearly sets out that the gap between children on free school meals and all other children is actually wider in wholly-selective areas than in nonselective. Grammar schools don’t close the education gap; they widen it.

“The EPI is right to state that if it wishes to raise social mobility, the government needs to do more to raise attainment in the early years of life and in primary schools. This makes planned cuts to nursery schools, who largely do serve disadvantaged families, even harder to justify.”

A government spokesperson said proposals were “not about recreating the binary system of the past, which is what this report is based on”.

“We know grammar schools provide a good education for disadvantaged pupils, helping to all but eliminate the attainment gap between disadvantaged pupils and their peers, and we want more pupils from lower income backgrounds to benefit from that,” she said.

“We are clear that relaxing restrictions on selective education can and should be to the betterment, not at the expense, of other local schools.”

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