By Keystone Knowledge on Wednesday, 23 February 2022
Category: General

Summary of State of the Nation Report

The Social Mobility Commission has just released their State of the Nation 2021 report which details how social mobility has been impacted by the pandemic. Social mobility is the link between your income and your parents' income. There is a strong relationship between high inequality and low social mobility. If there are high levels of inequality in a society, children of highly paid parents are more likely to be highly paid than children of low-income parents. As of 2020, the UK ranks 21st on the Global Social Mobility Index and 44th on the Education Quality and Equity Index (this is below countries like Kazakhstan, Armenia, and Estonia). Research has also shown that there is a link between societal inequality, the quality of education that children receive and their lifetime earning potential.

Here are the key things you need to know about social mobility and education: 

 Child poverty and the attainment gap

 Technology & income

Background & job prospects

Recommendations

The Social Mobility Commission estimates that £15 billion is needed to recover from the learning loss, just in England alone. This is far more than the initial £3.1 billion that the government has announced.

Here are some of their recommendations:

Target funding for disadvantaged students between 16 and 19.

There are already Student Premiums for students aged 5-16. This additional funding will help students and support schools & colleges to close the attainment gap. These resources should be used by schools in the way that best suits their pupils e.g. tutoring, new staff etc.

Factor in persistent disadvantage into funding, especially in early years

By focussing on students who have predominantly been in poverty during their school life, outcomes can be dramatically improved. More research would need to be done into the best way to use the funds, whether there would be barriers to access and what value the payments should be.

Create funding for more TLRs for mid-career teachers

These additions to a baseline salary can encourage experienced teachers to stay in disadvantaged schools, rather than leave to find career advancement elsewhere. Research by the Sutton Trust in 2019 found that 58% of teachers in the country's most disadvantaged schools were not sure that their school would be able to find suitable teachers to fill their vacancies.

In conclusion

There are many schools that go above and beyond to help their disadvantaged pupils and more funding in the education system would certainly make it easier for schools to close the gap between outcomes for disadvantaged and non-disadvantaged pupils. Until that change in funding happens, if it does, the main action to take away from this report for school business leaders is the importance of managing your budget to maximise your current funding to the benefit of your disadvantaged pupils, because the number is rising and the gap is widening.

Although the report can be incredibly disheartening in parts, there is still hope. Education can be the step up that many children, especially those from underprivileged backgrounds, need to make a better life for themselves and their families.

Keystone offers a comprehensive range of services with a friendly, knowledgeable team. We are devoted to helping as many schools as we can reach best practice and use every penny to ensure the best outcomes for their pupils.