Socio economic considerations are an important influencing factor on pupils’ achievement and attainment at school and beyond. The substantial gap between high and low socio economic status (SES) is an important equity issue for all ethnic groups.
SES proxy measures include:
A recent DCSF report[1] highlights that pronounced low attainment is observed in:
The same report shows that taking SEC into consideration:
The relative effects of socio-economic class and ethnicity on A-level and undergraduate subject choices
The report on the participation of ethnic minority groups in chemistry and physics (this is available to download from the ‘publications’ page) considered the progress of various ethnic groups along the educational pipeline. Significant differences were observed between ethnic groups, and the IOP and The Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) have commissioned a follow-up piece of research, which looks at the issue from a qualitative angle via focus group work.
However, social class considerations were not addressed in the original report, and it is not known how much of the behaviour of different ethnic groups is due to the ethnic/cultural background and how much is due to the socio-economic characteristics of particular groups. The RSC and the IOP plan to examine the relative effects of social class and ethnicity along the educational pipeline for chemistry and physics students in order to unravel the entanglement of ethnicity and SEC.
[1]‘Minority Ethnic Pupils in the Longitudinal Study of Young People in England’
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