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State Schools Eclipse Eton in rankings for A-Level Science

182 replies

evenstrangerthings · 06/07/2017 17:54

Your Life has today published a new school ranking based on STEM subject performance at A Level and ability to deliver skills for the jobs of today and the future. Several schools have climbed more than 1,000 places in new STEM rankings, while Eton and Harrow drop out of the top 100. In some instances poorly performing schools according to Ofsted have a higher than average STEM ranking. On the back of findings, Your Life Chair Edwina Dunn, has called for an ‘urgent rethink’ of the way schools are assessed to equip the country for a post BREXIT world.

Report and full table at:

https://www.yourlife.org.uk/urgent-rethink-schools-assessment-required-equip-uk-post-brexit-worldd_

OP posts:
sendsummer · 10/07/2017 21:35

privilege attracts privilege
Not according to the proverb Wealth does not pass three generations or variations thereof. Perhaps because all those private school DCs are selecting humanities rather than stem subjects Wink.

If I were going to be taxed more for education I would certainly want it directed to those DCs whose parents or carers do not or cannot care about their education plus they are entrapped in one of the mediocre or poor school systems.
Educated MC parents may not be in careers that can afford private education or catchment areas to the best schools but usually that is due to life choices after their own education,,, not from lack of choice.

Lurkedforever1 · 11/07/2017 00:05

Privilege does attract privilege, which is why London has the privilege of much higher funding than everywhere else. And why the better state schools have a majority of mc parents, whilst the worst state schools have a majority of low income families.

The greater irony is that the very children who need the better state schools are least likely to get them.

LimpLettuce · 11/07/2017 07:06

Um I suspect it's more maths , the amount of the average income and most certainly lack of choice rather than life choices. The middle classes are a pretty big group.Nobody chooses not to be able to afford private or places in the very best state schools which yes are often in London or other other very expensive areas which may or may not have affordable private housing or even relavent work. The middle classes are supposed to have the sharpest of elbows. If these elbows are so sharp why are so many not in top London comps or private schools? Why are so many elbowed out of the top positions by a select few who went to private school?Hmm

The middle classes can't win. The richest in the private sector don't want them getting their grubby undeserving hands on the privilidges their children enjoy. Everybody else sees them as grasping and sharp elbowed. Not much for the children of those truly struggling to aspire to is it.

Do you know how much houses cost in areas with the very best schools which truly compete with the top private schools? Said schools still lose out anyway going by concerns from Sutton et al.

sendsummer · 11/07/2017 07:28

Lurked you and Bertrand are right for areas and schools. Money makes a difference for school choice whether private or state. However which MC families are the higher earners will shift through generations especially with global competition.

Limplettuce if there was enough public money to tackle education for those most deprived then the economy would benefit and may be we could go back to free grants. I agree that having to work at university takes time away from study but it is also good experience for job applications and in the States is the norm.

LimpLettuce · 11/07/2017 07:47

I had to work my way through uni. I can assure you that cleaning loos,shop work and waitressing did zilch for my cv.

I'm pretty sure the same won't give my DC a leg up if applying for top jobs when in direct competition from rich kids who got a better degree due to not needing to work and a top private school such as Eton on their cv.

gemsandstones · 11/07/2017 08:22

Bertrand - that applies in every area of life. The children who have most need of nutritious food have no chance of getting it.
Substitute that with, housing, clothing, Medical care etc. Only in a communist society would everyone have equal access everything.

Ontopofthesunset · 11/07/2017 09:46

I think all children have exactly the same need for nutritious food and adequate housing!

gemsandstones · 11/07/2017 11:07

Starving children in poverty stricken places have more need of nutritious food, for obvious reasons.
Homeless children need housing more urgently.
Sick children require more access to medical care.
Sadly, they don't always.

Ontopofthesunset · 11/07/2017 11:39

But if you didn't give nutritious food to the ones who aren't starving they would be starving too. The starving children will die if they don't get food but the well-nourished ones will start to starve. Every child has the same need for food prima facie.

Ontopofthesunset · 11/07/2017 11:41

And homeless children don't need housing "more" urgently - they need it urgently. The ones in houses need to stay there "urgently" otherwise they'd be homeless too.

Lurkedforever1 · 11/07/2017 12:20

gems that's entirely different. The nhs is comparable. Yes there is a postcode lottery, but what we don't do is tell people from low income homes they only deserve a failing hospital that doesn't offer the treatment they need, where they are more likely to be treated by staff without relevant qualifications and where anything but critical illness will probably be ignored because what staff they have simply have to prioritise the most desperate. Whilst allowing the mc to buy into catchment, and/ or dedicate hours to worshipping the holy medicine God in order to receive health care more akin to private than the hospital their poorer peers receive.

limp the cost of university isn't what is putting the poorest off. It's the lack of expectation from some families and some schools, and even with a child with the will to succeed the lack of suitable education and direction.

BertrandRussell · 11/07/2017 13:08

"Bertrand - that applies in every area of life. The children who have most need of nutritious food have no chance of getting it.
Substitute that with, housing, clothing, Medical care etc. Only in a communist society would everyone have equal access everything."

Education is a special case. Nutritious food is nutritious food, whether it's cheap or expensive. Adequate housing is adequate, regardless of cost. Ditto warm clothing. Expensive education and cheap education are not the same commodity.

Dapplegrey2 · 11/07/2017 13:48

Only in a communist society would everyone have equal access everything.

There is a lot of inequality in communist countries. In the GDR high ranking members of the government, army and the Stasi had all sorts of privileges re housing, cars and food etc that ordinary citizens could only dream about. The same applied to all Soviet Union countries and applies today in places like Cuba and Venezuela.

BertrandRussell · 11/07/2017 13:52

I make it a rule to ignore references to communism. People accuse you of wanting to introduce communism when you want them to admit that they are taking advantage of an unfair system!

gemsandstones · 11/07/2017 14:47

I don't think people are taking advantage of a fair system, I think people are trying to obtain the best education they can for their children within what the law allows that is affordable to them.

Dapplegrey2 · 11/07/2017 16:01

The richest in the private sector don't want them getting their grubby undeserving hands on the privilidges their children enjoy.

Limp could you enlarge further on that comment? Give some examples of what you mean, maybe?
That's quite a generalisation.

sendsummer · 11/07/2017 18:30

I make it a rule to ignore references to communism. People accuse you of wanting to introduce communism when you want them to admit that they are taking advantage of an unfair system!
We are all operating within an unfair system (which will by the laws of nature remain unfair) to do the best for our DCs.
That might mean unfairly taking up state funds when we could afford private education by sending our DCs to a state school.
Or it could be supplementing our DCs' education by outside stuff and input which deprived DCs don't have.
Or it could be avoiding our talented DCs going to a poor state school by taking up a bursary to a private school.

Or it could be removing money from the UK economy by sending our DCs outside of the UK for their private education because private schools are penalised in this country.

Genevieva · 11/07/2017 21:07

I haven't read the whole thread, but I wanted to add a couple of things.

  1. At present only around half of children in this country are achieving 5 A*-C grades including Maths and English at GCSE. This means any stats on A Level results are automatically 'selective' and sadly wealth plays a huge part in this, meaning that the chances of a child from a very disadvantaged background studying A Levels at all is slim.
  1. Universities already receive information on students who are from very disadvantaged backgrounds, including free school meal eligibility during their schooling and the range of results that children achieve at the school they attended. This enables them to make informed decisions, including offering a reduced provisional offer to make it easier for the disadvantaged child with potential to get into university. This is as it should be, but to make this approach to admissions available to all state educated children would be unworkable and unfair on those who truly need it.

As others have said, the huge barrier is getting children from those very disadvantaged backgrounds to a point where they can benefit from a university education at all. For many there is already a gulf in social skills when they start school at 4 years old and by the time they finish school they are so far away from university eligibility that even a C grade in Maths and English GCSEs is beyond their ambition. It is a problem that has vexed many generations of social workers, teachers and politicians. The children from this sort of very disadvantaged background who achieve against the odds are truly remarkable and deserve every leg up that our society can give them.

  1. On this basis, it is my view that MC parents who want their state educated children to benefit from similar positive discrimination are not being honest with themselves about the advantages their children already have, simply by having a reasonably stable home life and parents who are educated and interested in the world around them. There really isn't that much difference between a state educated child in a class of 30 and a privately educated child in a class of 20, so stop worrying about your child being disadvantaged. The confidence that people often talk about private school kids having can be gained through so many things - participating in the school play, joining the local cricket club, scouts or choir... Private schools off these in-house, but they are all available in the community too, often for very little money and free to children who wouldn't otherwise be able to attend. Only a very small proportion of privately educated kids have 'connections' and these connections will be through family, not through school. Ultimately, as long as we have a loving and supportive family, our future success and happiness is of our own making. It is really important our children know how lucky they are to live in a civilised and peaceful country where we can all access education, culture and sporting opportunities for little or no cost.
LimpLettuce · 11/07/2017 21:48

Sorry but that is clearly not the case.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-35641061

I think focusing on a tiny percentage of pp kids detracts from the much wider picture and bigger numbers of children involved.

All children matter. Not just pp kids and not just the 7% of privately educated kids who cream off the vast majority of top jobs.

Lurkedforever1 · 11/07/2017 22:08

They do limp and just as soon as all the other dc in the state system, including the pp kids, have the same access to good education that mc children currently do, we can start on the woes of the mc, and how harsh their lives are.

The only objection I have to the focus on pp is that the level should be raised because the group just above the threshold are often just as deprived. And the fact bright pp children often don't get anything beneficial from the funding.

Genevieva · 11/07/2017 22:22

The article doesn't support your argument that all state educated children should have lower university offers than independently educated children.

The point of the article is the percentage of privately educated people who have reached the top of their professions. It is very high I agree. Some of this is generational (most judges are 60+ so were at school when a larger percentage of university graduates were from independent schools). For other areas like acting, the reasons are more esoteric and no amount of tinkering with university admissions will make any difference. It would be possible to compile a list of state educated people who have reached the top too. John Major and Laura Trott spring to mind, but there are lots of others.

You are deaf to the arguments on this thread that have already been made about the net gain for our country of attracting and retaining top talent, so that high earners pay tax in this country and make interesting jobs available here rather than in other corners of the globe.

You are also deaf to the very real needs of the most disadvantaged children in our society. It is great that the percentage of these children has increased in recent years, but they represent a drop in an ocean of unrealised potential.

I am sorry to hear that you feel you battled through university by working in your free time and that you now work in a minimum wage job and feel that your children are disadvantaged by not having access to an independent education. I maintain that the best response is not to try to harm the opportunities available to others, but to take advantage of the many free and affordable ways of giving your children the best start in life. Teachers have a special place in their hearts for the children who are enthusiastic in their lessons, museums and galleries are now more child-friendly than ever before. There is so much out there for little or no cost. There is so much out there to take advantage of.

Genevieva · 11/07/2017 22:25

percentage of these children reaching university has increased.

sendsummer · 11/07/2017 23:08

I'm pretty sure the same won't give my DC a leg up if applying for top jobs when in direct competition from rich kids who got a better degree due to not needing to work and a top private school such as Eton on their cv.
Limplettuce firstly for employment most employers don't differentiate between firsts and 2:1s so even if more free time equates to better degrees (assuming the necessary work ethic) the advantage will be minimal for CV screening. Nowadays any sort of work experience is a plus.
Secondly being an Etonian or Harrovian or whatever in the job market is not an automatic advantage, sometimes quite the opposite.
Thirdly generallly DCs of Asian immigrants are very successful educationally even when coping with restricted socioeconomic means, large classes, indifferent teaching etc. They just seem to compensate by effort and ambition. No reason why your DCs can't do the same.

Havingahorridtime · 12/07/2017 07:17

The greater irony is that the very children who need the better state schools are least likely to get them.

I totally agree with this but it will fall on deaf ears because a lot of people see private schools as the main enemy.

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