Achievement in British Education is a branch of British Sociology which examines and discusses the factors influencing the achievement of pupils who are taught by the British education system.

Table of contents
1 Overview
2 The effect of intelligence
3 The effect of class
4 The effect of ethnicity
5 The effect of gender

Overview

To a greater degree, British education suffers from the class-based nature of British society, in that it has been proven that class affects educational achievement by British children more than the other two main factors put together - gender and ethnicity.

As a rough guide, the effect of class, ethnicity and gender affect educational achievement is in a ratio of 11:4:2, so that class is 5.5 times more likely to affect achievement than gender, and ethnicity is twice as likely as gender to affect achievement.

The idea that British education is Meritocratic is not held in high regard by Sociologists, as even Functionalist Sociologists acknowledge the undue effect of class, gender and ethnicity.

The effect of intelligence

Insofar as it is possible, it has been disproved that educational achievement is dependent on intelligence to any measurable degree. Sociologists have tested children from different backgrounds/genders/ethnicities, and found that those who are equal according to these tests still do achieve differently in education.

Also, there is no really valid measure (or even a definition) of intelligence, as IQ tests have been discredited and intelligence can be defined in many different ways.

The effect of class

Being born into a higher class family is the greatest determinant of educational achievement in Britain, with the average child of a higher class family doing far better than an average working class child.

There are many theoretical/proven factors in this:

  • Upper-class families can send their children to private schools (though these are paradoxically called public schools in Britain), where the achievement rates are far higher than even prestigious state schools.
  • Working-class families lack Cultural capital, which means that their culture is incompatible with that of schools, who have adopted the dominant (i.e. middle and upper) class culture.
  • Parents of working-class families (in general) have a less tolerant attitude toward education than their middle-class counterparts, meaning that they cannot get the most out of the system (e.g. checking on their child's achievement, making sure they get into good schools etc.).
  • Working-class parents also are likely to be less educated than their middle-class counterparts, therefore cannot help their children with pre-school learning and school homework as much.
  • Working-class children are far more likely to go to deprived/problem schools, which middle-class parents have the resources and awareness to avoid.
  • The English-language gulf between the Restricted code and Elaborated code, as studied by Bernstein means that working-class children's language is (at first, anyway) incompatible with school, which uses the Elaborated code.
  • The Cultural deprivation of working-class children, both before and during their school years:
    • Less likely to be bought educational toys while infants, hence pre-school learning does not happen at the same rate as with middle-class children.
    • Less likely to experience events that could enhance education (e.g. trips to France that would improved French language skills, or going to the theater to see the plays of Shakespeare etc.).
  • The culture clash that occurs between the life outside school of working-class children and their life inside school, inparticular the anti-learning culture of their working-class peers and (perhaps) parents.
  • Teacher expectations of working-class children are lower, as following may happen:
    • The teachers may Stereotype working-class children as being stupid/slow/disruptive/lazy/etc.
    • One practice in British education is to group children according to their ability, either in all subjects (called Streaming) or in particular subjects (called Banding or Setting). It has been shown that working-class children end up in the lower streams/bands/sets more often than not, even if their intelligence means they deserve to be in a higher one. It has also been shown that being put in lower bands makes children achieve less, as the teachers do not try as hard and the children are demotivated by their placement.
    • Teachers can and do also label particular children, with working-class children mode likely to earn negative labels. This may create a Self-fulfilling prophecy, where the child performs as predicted simply because of their response to the prediction.
  • The class subculture theory advance by Sugarman asserts that because of certain elements of working-class subculture (e.g. a present time orientation - live for now, don't work toward a future goal - and collective rather than individual achievement) educational achievement, which involves studying for a future goal (GCSEs) individually, is harder for the working class.
  • Material factors evident in working-class families may also adversely affect educational achievement:
    • Poorer housing - this usually means smaller housing, which means that children may not get a chance to study in peace and quiet.
    • Diet - not getting the right nutrients or even (in some cases) not getting a sufficient supply of any nutrients, right or not, means that some working-class children cannot concentrate/learn as much.
    • Sickness - A working-class child is statistically more likely to get sick, and this means they miss lessons at school.
    • Low income - This means that certain school activities which must be paid for cannot be paid for, and that books etc. needed for school cannot be bought.
    • Part-time work - Because of the (usually) greater money pressures in working-class families, children may do part-time work, either to give themselves an income (as the parents would give them less/no pocket money) or would be supplementing their parents' income. The added pressure of part-time work on a child can affect their achievement.

It must be stated however that this does not mean that all working-class children will fail (on the contrary, the author of this text is from a working-class family and has done/is doing quite well educationally), but it is less likely that they will do well given all of the above.

The effect of ethnicity

To be done

The effect of gender

After ethnicity, gender is the next greatest determinant of achievement.

Up until recently, girls did not do as well as boys. However, in recent time this has reversed, with Girls doing better than Boys in education as a rule.

There are many theoretical/proven factors in this:

It is also interesting to note that girls are still do not have full equal opportunities in education, but are already doing better than boys. The inequalities still left are: