1 / 28

When you are born matters

When you are born matters. Steven Donohue EMAS June 2013.

cachet
Télécharger la présentation

When you are born matters

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. When you are born matters Steven Donohue EMAS June 2013

  2. When you are born matters: The impact of Date of Birth on Child Cognitive Outcomes in England – Crawford, Dearden, Meghir, IFS, 2007Month of Birth and Education – Schools Analysis and Research Division, DfE, 2010When you are born matters: evidence for England – Crawford, Dearden, Greaves, IFS, 2013

  3. “10,000 summer-born children per year fail to achieve [5A*-C including English and Maths] as GCSE, which influences their chances of progressing to A-levels and beyond, purely... due to the timing of their birth...”

  4. 2012 GCSE gaps (5A*-C inc E and M, percentage points, England)

  5. Four research questions What’s the extent of the “birth penalty” across phases? What’s the impact of admissions policies in YR? Why does the “birth penalty” exist? How does it affect subgroups (e.g. August birth date + FSM)?

  6. Data Attainment data from: EYFS KS1 KS2 KS3 KS4 KS5 + pupil characteristics from school census Standardised APS % pupils reaching expected level % pupils exceeding expected level

  7. Cohorts No single cohort for which there is data at all levels, so:

  8. Group 2 Mean standardised APS at KS1, KS2, KS3

  9. Group 3 Mean standardised APS at KS2, KS3, KS4

  10. Wiltshire – KS2 L4+

  11. Wiltshire – KS4 5 A*-C inc. English and Maths GCSE

  12. Key findings What’s the extent of the “birth penalty” across phases? “...there is evidence of a significant August birth penalty in all outcomes at every age... it declines over time, but is still significant at ages 16 and 18, when students are making decisions about employment and/or future study.” “significant” = significant at the 1% level

  13. Key findings What’s the extent of the “birth penalty” across phases? At the age of 11, August-born girls are 25% more likely to have statemented SEN and 72% more likely to have non-statemented SEN compared to September-born girls. The figures for boys are 14% and 46% respectively.

  14. Key findings Socio-emotional development Dark green – Millennium Cohort Study; Light green – Avon Longitudinal Study

  15. Key findings Self-perception Light green – Avon Longitudinal Study; Grey – Longitudinal Study of YP in England

  16. Key findings • Adult outcomes • those born at the end of the academic year are significantly more likely to be unemployed than those born earlier • no significant difference for earnings/hr • no significant differences for occupation, household income, intergenerational mobility, health status or mental well-being.

  17. Key findings What’s the impact of admissions policies in YR? “August-born children are slightly better off (and certainly no worse off) if they start school in the September of the academic year they turn 5... this is likely to be of greater benefit to girls than to boys.”

  18. Key findings Why does the “birth penalty” exist? Absolute age effect Age of starting school effect Length of schooling effect Relative age effect

  19. Key findings Why does the “birth penalty” exist? Age of starting school effect Absolute age effect Length of schooling effect Relative age effect

  20. Key findings How does it affect subgroups? FSM Children from deprived areas Children of different ethnic origins “...the most important finding is the lack of significant differences amongst the majority of subgroups considered.”

  21. Options “...somebody always has to be youngest...”

  22. IFS’s Options • Age normalisation of test results • Testing when ready • Changes to free nursery provision and flexibility over school starting ages • Other options • YR admissions policies • Teacher training • Investigating successful schools

  23. Assessment As part of our reforms to the national curriculum , the current system of ‘levels’ used to report children’s attainment and progress will be removed.  It will not be replaced... Schools will be able to introduce their own approaches to formative assessment, to support pupil attainment and progression. What opportunities might this open up for summer-born children?

  24. Assessment “Assessing when ready” – schools could report on what age pupils reached a level of achievement (like the EYFS profile...) Now Assessed at a single point in time (say June Y5) Levels reported without reference to age – Sandra L4a, Jamal L4c In future? Continuous assessment Age at which level was reached is reported – Sandra reached L4c aged 10.2, Jamal reached L4c aged 9.9

  25. Auditing • What’s happening in your school? • Look at attainment... • Look at average age of groups (e.g. top set Maths, bottom set Maths...) It’s easy to work out how many days old someone is using Excel!

  26. Teacher awareness There’s some evidence teachers underrate summer-born children. Summer-born children are more likely to have KS2 teacher assessments that are lower than their English SATs results “...teacher assessments might penalise the performance of relatively younger pupils in the cohort...”

  27. School to school • Are any schools able to identify that their summer-born pupils are doing well? • Are any schools able to identify specific pieces of good practice that have made a difference? http://tinyurl.com/summerborn

More Related