The Project
Latest publication – Education and Care, A resource for young people is based on interview findings from this study. We hope the resource will encourage children and young people to talk to their carers, social workers and teachers about their educational experiences.We would like to thank Oxfordshire County Council and the members of their Children in Care Council for their valuable feedback on an earlier version of this resource. The resource now reflects the amendments they suggested.
This study focused on children in England who had a social worker (whether living in Care or at home as a ‘Child in Need’) at some stage of their schooling. It looked for the factors associated with attainments at Key Stage 4 (16 years), and explored parents’, children’s and professionals’ views on the factors affecting educational progress for Children in Need and Children in Care. The research involved both statistical analysis of data from a whole birth cohort of children (471,688) born in England in 2000/01, starting school in 2006/07 and tracked through to their General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) exams in 2017 as well as interviews with 123 children, parents/carers, social workers, teachers and managers.
This is a joint project between the Rees Centre and the University of Bristol, led by Professor David Berridge at the University of Bristol and Dr Nikki Luke at the Rees Centre, University of Oxford.
The project has been funded by the Nuffield Foundation, but the views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily the Foundation.
Former team member: Louise McGrath-Lone
Key Findings
Attainment
The research highlighted that some 69,246 – 1 in 7 of the whole cohort – had a social worker at some stage of their schooling. These children had lower attainment at each Key Stage of schooling than children who never needed a social worker, scoring between 10-16% lower than their peers at the end of primary school and 34-53% lower than their peers at the end of secondary school.
A substantial part of the relatively low attainment at age 16 of pupils who had ever been In Need or In Care was accounted for by information available at age 7: the child’s attainment at 7, gender, ethnicity, socio-economic status, and special educational needs and disabilities. This suggests that broader forms of disadvantage – which were more prevalent in these groups than in other children – had a lasting effect on children’s educational attainments throughout their schooling.
Findings from the statistical analysis and interviews were combined into four main themes:
1. Greater attention required to Children in Need
There is much discussion in social work and education about Children in Care, but Children in Need as a group receive much less attention. Children In Need are a much bigger group than Children In Care and share many of their characteristics and disadvantages, as well as having similar educational attainment. Most Children in Care had previously been Children in Need, so focusing attention on one group but not the other is counter-productive.
Interviews with the families of Children in Need also showed the additional challenge for many of this group of living in poverty; despite personal sacrifice, parents found it very difficult to afford what their children needed for school – uniforms, computers, internet access etc. In contrast, most foster carers looking after Children in Care said that they could provide what was needed for children’s education.
2. Importance of early intervention
Given the number of children who received social work services – 1 in 7 – and that more serious interventions usually began as Children in Need, it is sensible to address family problems as soon as they begin with high quality, early intervention services. This could help mitigate against the need for later intervention. As many as a fifth experienced another social work intervention within a year after the previous one ending, and 13% experienced 4 or more periods of intervention in total. A quarter of all children who had been receiving a service had a social worker in the final year of their GCSEs. Their problems are likely to have affected their learning and exam results.
3. Instability in children’s care and education
Taking other factors into account, children with multiple periods of intervention achieved lower educational attainments than those with fewer. This might reflect the chronic problems that families were experiencing but earlier resolution of problems could have been possible and desirable. Children who entered Care or had moved to live with relatives often spoke of the improved stability and consistency in their lives.
School instability was also related to KS4 exam results: missing a greater number of possible school sessions through absences or fixed-term/permanent exclusions, and changing school in Years 10 or 11, were all predictors of poorer attainment.
4. The nature of secondary schooling and educational policy for vulnerable learners
The general impression from our interviews was that primary schools were often more flexible than secondary schools, being inclusive institutions that were able to cope with children’s difficulties; whereas there was much more variation in how secondary schools responded. Not all schools were described by children, parents and social workers as understanding or sympathetic to children’s difficulties. This reflected sometimes an inflexible approach to academic excellence and school discipline.
Relationships with teachers and teaching styles emerged as very important for children, in order for them to be confident and participate in class, producing their best results.
Implications for Policy and Practice
- EducationCareResourceEfforts to increase the visibility of the Children in Need group should continue, including proposals contained in the Government’s Children in Need Review (2019). This should include raising the profile of the Children in Need group within schools.
- There would be strong advantages in Virtual Schools, or a similar service, overseeing Children in Need as well as Children in Care. This would need additional resource.
- There is a case for Pupil Premium Plus (PPP) payments (currently £2,300 per annum for Children in Care and former CIC) to be extended in some form to Children in Need.
- Approaches that address the impact of poverty on education should be promoted (for example ‘Poverty Proofing the School Day’ http://www.povertyproofing. co.uk/, in which affordability of schooling is taken into account in school policies.
- We recommend a review of decision making procedures surrounding ‘case closure’ so that families are not left without adequate support.
- Teacher training for pupils’ well-being should include the specific circumstances of Children in Need and Children in Care, for example, ‘attachment awareness’ issues.
- There should be less variation across secondary schools in their inclusiveness: including reducing permanent and fixed-term exclusions, and monitoring the impact of disciplinary codes on Children in Need and Children in Care.
Reports and Resources
The following pdf reports are free to download:
Full report Children in Need and Children in Care: Educational Attainment and Progress, April 2020
Education and Care A Resource for Young People
Lead researcher at the Rees Centre – Dr Nikki Luke. Contact Nikki
Lead researcher at University of Bristol – Professor David Berridge. Bristol project web page
Research Team
