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Bright pupils 'do better among clever peers'

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By Timesonline

Bright pupils from all backgrounds do better in their GCSEs if they go to a predominantly middle class school with other clever pupils, according to compelling new research into the power of peer group effects on academic performance.

The research, based on GCSE results of 555,000 pupils in England - an entire year group - suggests that for the brightest ten per cent of teenagers, being educated with other clever children in an affluent state school can add on average half a grade to each subject they take at GCSE. Over eight GCSEs, this could mean that instead of getting straight Bs, a pupil gets four As and four Bs.

Conversely, bright children going to disadvantaged schools in poor areas are likely to underachieve to the same degree.

It suggests that “pupils attending more advantaged schools derive additional educational benefits from being educated with pupils with higher levels of prior attainment, and lower levels of deprivation,” the report’s authors, Dr Philip Noden and Professor Anne West, from the London School of Economics, conclude.

The research, commissioned by the Sutton Trust education charity is the first major study to quantify the extent of peer group effects.

The authors suggest that bright pupils do worse in deprived schools because the government’s gifted and talented programme is not working properly there. Deprived schools may also have worse pupil behaviour and less effective teaching.

They are also more likely to encourage bright teenagers to do vocational courses, not because the pupils are suited to them, but because the points earned for passes in these subjects will help boost the school’s league table position.

This means that simply throwing extra money at deprived schools will not on its own be enough to close the attainment gap between rich and poor. There needs to be more help for gifted pupils in sink schools and better careers advice to ensure they are entered for the right exams, the report says.

More controversially, the authors also suggest that in order to maximise the benefits to pupils of the positive peer group effect, bright children should be spread more evenly throughout state schools, rather than allowed to gravitate towards a few ’good’, predominantly middle-class, schools.

While not exactly suggesting that the interests of the brightest middle class children should be sacrificed for the benefit of all, the report comes pretty close by promoting “a more even spread of pupil intakes into state schools in terms of ability and disadvantage”.

“Encouraging greater use of area wide banding, in which pupils of a range of abilities are enrolled at all local schools, would be a relatively low cost means of reducing (...) educational inequality. The intakes of all schools in the area would be genuinely comprehensive, and so the potential benefits and penalties of being with certain peer groups would be evenly spread,” the authors say.

They also advocate a lottery or random allocation system for handing out places in oversubscribed schools. This would have the effect of preventing middle class people from colonising the best state schools by buying or renting property within the school catchment area - an option often not open to pupils from poorer families.

Dr Lee Elliot Major, research director of The Sutton Trust, accepted that this was a controversial solution. “Some might suggest that a return to the grammar school system is the answer because it puts all the bright children together. But we would prefer a system that creates a balanced intake in all schools, so that the positive peer effect is shared around and you don’t get pockets of affluence and deprivation,” he said.







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