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Set targets for white working-class access, MPs tell regulator

Education Committee says Office for Students must take tougher action on dearth of disadvantaged white pupils entering higher education

Published on
June 22, 2021
Last updated
June 22, 2021
Archery target
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England鈥檚 sector regulator should set specific targets to聽improve the entry rate of聽white working-class students to聽higher education, MPs聽say.

The House of Commons Education Committee says in a聽report that white working-class students have been let down by 鈥渄ecades of neglect鈥 and that the large number of聽disadvantaged white British pupils聽who underachieve in education 鈥渞emains a聽significant obstacle to聽closing the overall attainment聽gap鈥.

In the report, the committee notes that the proportion of white British pupils who were eligible for free school meals聽who had entered higher education by the age of聽19 in 2018-19 was 16聽per cent, the lowest of any ethnic group other than Travellers of Irish heritage and Gypsy/Roma.

The committee says the Office for Students must implement a target for 鈥渋nclusion of pupils from disadvantaged white backgrounds, to聽ensure that white working-class students鈥 participation in聽HE is a聽key priority for all universities鈥.

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The committee says it is 鈥渃oncerned to hear that higher education providers are failing to tackle this problem proactively鈥 through their access and participation plans. The聽OfS should therefore review how providers are held to account on聽supporting all disadvantaged groups in聽higher education, ensuring that white students complete their courses successfully and continue on to good careers, the report says.

The OfS should report to Parliament in a year鈥檚 time on its progress towards the targets and measures, it聽adds.

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The report does acknowledge that while relatively high numbers of students from ethnic minority backgrounds do go to university, they are more likely to drop out. The committee advocates focusing widening participation efforts on geographic-based measures, 鈥渨hich will be more effective at targeting the barriers faced by working-class communities, including majority white communities, in left-behind areas鈥.

Recent analysis from the OfS showed that white disadvantaged students from former industrial towns and cities across the north and the Midlands, or coastal towns, had the lowest rates of participation in higher education, while the entry rate for poor white students in London was nearly 8 percentage points higher than any other region.

Although the report acknowledges that the participation rate for disadvantaged white pupils 鈥渋s a clear indictment of the failures and attainment gaps that accumulate throughout primary and secondary education鈥, it also calls on higher education providers to do more to improve access from this group.

Money spent by institutions on access should be sent 鈥渦pstream鈥 to better inform pupils about the benefits of higher education or to encourage more students to consider degree apprenticeships, the report says.

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The report adds that MPs believe that the term 鈥渨hite privilege鈥 is unhelpful when it comes to addressing the attainment gap because it fails to recognise the disadvantage many poorer pupils face. However, minutes from the committee鈥檚 discussions of the report show that members were divided on the extent of this.

Robert Halfon, chair of the Education Committee, said that for decades white working-class pupils 鈥渉ave been let down and neglected by an education system that condemns them to falling behind their peers every step of the聽way鈥.

鈥淚f the government is serious about closing the overall attainment gap, then the problems faced by the biggest group of disadvantaged pupils can no longer be swept under the carpet. Never again should we lazily put the gap down to poverty alone, given that we know free school meal eligible pupils from other ethnic groups consistently outperform their white British peers,鈥 Mr Halfon said.

anna.mckie@timeshighereducation.com

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