Image for Can school improvement overcome the effects of disadvantage?

Can school improvement overcome the effects of disadvantage? (Rev. ed)

Part of the Perspectives on Education Policy series
See all formats and editions

When this book was first published in 1997 the relationship between pupils' backgrounds and their school achievement has received little attention in education discussions.

Although there has been more recognition of the problem, the correlation between disadvantaged family background and low achievement persists.

The authors have revised and updated their discussion of what disadvantage can mean for pupils, the strategies that have been adopted to combat it and the efficacy of these programmes.

The authors argue that efforts to compensate at school for disadvantage at home have been too limited in scope.

They endorse school improvement work, which has established mechanisms for whole-school change, but fear that claims for its significance may have been exaggerated.

They consider that, if the achievement gap between the advantaged and their disadvantaged peers is to be closed, the present government must go beyond its work on school improvement.

It should better co-ordinate initiatives that seek more directly to help the disadvantaged, maintain those interventions which have proved to have positive effects and extend the opportunities for post-school learning.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Institute of Education
0854736255 / 9780854736256
Paperback / softback
01/06/2000
United Kingdom
English
vi, 39p.
21 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More
Previous ed.: 1997.