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School tables 'lack deprivation data'

Posted: 20 May 2004 | Subscribe Online


Secondary school performance tables should be weighted to take more account of social deprivation, MPs recommended last week.

Data on families on income support or the working families tax credit should be included in calculations, according to a report by the House of Commons public accounts committee. It adds that the current reliance on eligibility for free school meals shows only part of the picture.

Academic achievements may also be influenced by a school's funding levels, the condition of its buildings, and the jobs and education of parents. The report says schools inspections body Ofsted should give more weight to these factors.
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MPs noted that, when the National Audit Office adjusted performance figures, many schools moved from the bottom to the top 20 per cent, while some in the top 20 per cent moved in the other direction.

The report suggests that adjusting for such factors as deprivation would also help the government measure the effectiveness of its national education policies.
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School standards minister David Milliband said "value added" performance measures now took account of pupils' improvement, but the government wanted to "go even further with a new annual school profile that will be easily accessible and give parents a broader and deeper understanding of school performance".


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