Leadership and Governance
The link between leadership in schools and outcomes for disadvantaged pupils is well established (National College for Leadership of Schools and Colleges (2010), DfE 2015). Research by the DfE in association with Centre for Education & Youth (2018), states that high performing schools are more likely to have a culture where pupils are encouraged to be ambitious and aspirations are high for all and well communicated to staff, pupils and parents alike; where staff share a common purpose in supporting their disadvantaged pupils; where success is celebrated. These factors feed into Brighton and Hove’s vision for disadvantaged pupils and are directly linked to how leaders create the culture of their schools.
Quality First Teaching
High Quality teaching, whether it be in class or remote, is of essential importance to improving outcomes for disadvantaged pupils especially for those pupils with fewer external opportunities for quality instruction or experiences. This is corroborated by the EEF (2020) who endorse a range of strategies including explicit teaching, high quality instruction, scaffolding, cognitive and metacognitive strategies and flexible AFL grouping most relevant to helping children during 2021 and beyond and ensuring sustained impact. Quality First Teaching also incorporates effective assessment for learning which should be a top priority in order to ascertain gaps and map where pupils currently are following school closure and periods of absence. This then links into the ability to prescribe targeted academic support.
This theme links directly into leadership and governance given that teachers can only provide quality teaching if they are properly trained and prepared. Training and CPD in schools which is focused on QFT improves the quality of teaching overall for all pupils and underpins an ethos of progress and current research. It also links to the implementation of wider pastoral strategies because teachers can incorporate social and emotional learning within their delivery and are often best able to assess a pupil’s wellbeing and need within the classroom environment.
Targeted Academic Support
Pupils who are disadvantaged are less likely to have access to targeted academic support despite the fact that carefully selected interventions such as small group work which is structured, short and consistent can help support academic achievement (EEF, 2020). It is recognised that access to tutoring is often limited to the schools and parents that can most afford it further highlighting the inequality arising from Covid 19 disruption for disadvantaged pupils. Whilst Quality First Teaching is of the utmost importance, supplementing this with targeted academic support for some pupils has been shown to be effective. In addition, the realities of the loss in learning resultant from the pandemic will also require greater targeted academic interventions in some situations.
The Government has funded a National Tutoring Programme delivered by EEF which has been specifically designed to reach England’s most disadvantaged children for additional, targeted support. We are keen that children and young people in the City can access significant support from this programme. EEF (2020) highlight that schools should ensure that they direct the tutoring process so that it is relevant to the pupils needs and curriculum. The need for effective communication and feedback between tutor, teacher and pupil is of great importance to effectiveness. In addition, the EEF (2020) suggest that the use of teaching assistants to complement and supplement the teacher in order to provide academic support can be effective when well managed and defined.
Pupil Voice and Pastoral Support
The Education Policy Institute (2018) state that ‘…given that the ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ skills necessary to succeed at school are primarily a result of parental cultivation and investment from birth onward, facilitated by the resources to which families have access, assessment scores in large part reflect family socio-economic position.’
The pandemic has heightened the inequalities experienced due to school closures and remote learning due to issues in connectivity, access to devices, physical and learning appropriate space and differing parental participation in remote learning, for example (Office of the Children’s Commissioner, 2020). In addition, the effect on physical and mental health and wellbeing has had a greater impact on those who were already disadvantaged (Mental Health Foundation, 2020).
Evidence shows that wider strategies to support attainment can have impact, for example, the link between providing breakfast and academic achievement (Adolphus, Lawton, Dye, 2013). EEF (2020) also highlight the importance of interweaving social and emotional learning into the curriculum as a way of supporting wellbeing and finding ways to develop and enhance parental engagement. However, it is recognised that ‘[…] factors beyond the school gates and in the communities where pupils live can have a detrimental impact on their achievement. Schools can do much to improve outcomes for disadvantaged pupils but only so much’ (Ofsted, 2014).
Attendance
Pre-pandemic evidence from the NFER (2019) showed that ‘On average, the association between being absent from school and KS4 outcomes is worse for disadvantaged pupils than their more affluent peers.’
School closures, burst bubbles, shielding, mental health issues and isolation as a result of the pandemic have impacted upon the attendance of and therefore the attainment of disadvantaged pupils significantly. The current instability of the situation means that a standardised approach to absenteeism is not appropriate. Research by NFER on behalf of the DfE (2015) suggests ‘…that disadvantaged pupils are a diverse group of young people who are likely to benefit from personalised and targeted intervention rather than purely universal approaches to support.’.
Language and Literacy
Literacy skills are interwoven into outcomes across all subjects and aspects of life. Language influences a child’s ability to express feelings and emotions and develop relationships (Public Health England, 2020) which directly links into the theme of pastoral support and pupil voice. An EEF report (2017) stated that ‘…researchers found that the strongest factor affecting pupils’ science scores is how well they understand written texts’ which influences the theme of quality first teaching and targeted academic support. In our own Authority, 65% of pupils who defined by the DfE as disadvantaged achieved age related expectation in KS2 in reading as opposed to 85% of their peers in 2019. The pandemic will further impact literacy skills. The DfE Interim Report (2021) found that there had been a learning loss in reading in primary schools from the first lockdown alone of in the region of 1.7-2.0 months. It also noted that schools which have higher levels of pupils who are disadvantaged suffered higher levels of learning loss especially in secondary phase.
Evidence Summaries compiled by the Education Endowment Fund (2021) show that strategies connected to low cost literacy interventions such as phonics, reading comprehension and oral language interventions have moderate to high impact. Nuffield Early Language Intervention (NELI) is a high-quality, evidence-based, 20-week intervention designed to improve the language skills of reception age pupils. It involves scripted individual and small group language teaching sessions, delivered by trained school staff, usually teaching assistants. Several EEF (2020) trials have found that NELI improves both children’s oral language and early literacy skills. A recent trial of the programme found that children made on average three months of additional progress compared to children in the comparison group.