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Kent grammar schools: Brighter, poorer children need more help claims KCC report

By: Paul Francis pfrancis@thekmgroup.co.uk

Published: 11:00, 13 June 2016

Updated: 11:31, 13 June 2016

Kent County Council has a “moral responsibility” to do more to help brighter, poorer children get to grammar school, a report by a cross-party group of county councillors into social mobility has concluded.

The report follows an inquiry examining ways in which bright children from less well-off families could be encouraged to go to grammar school. The inquiry was set up amid concerns that the grammar school system was skewed towards more affluent families and that poorer families were disadvantaged when it came to the 11-plus.

County councillors say in the report, which makes 17 recommendations, that both KCC and primary and secondary schools should do much more than they do now to help disadvantaged families access grammar schools.

Secondary school pupils: Library image

The inquiry report said ideally it would like to see the restoration of a scheme that gave free school transport to those whose nearest schools were more than three miles away. Councillors said KCC should extend free school transport to all children who were eligible for the pupil premium.

Another recommendation was that the threshold for parents on low incomes to qualify for free transport be increased to £21,000.

'It is clear that children from poorer backgrounds and those in care are under-represented in grammar schools'

In a foreword to the report, committee chairman Cllr Jenny Whittle (Con) said: “It is clear that children from poorer backgrounds and those in care are under-represented in grammar schools.

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“We believe...that KCC, primary and secondary schools have a moral responsibility to work together to support the most academically able children from disadvantaged backgrounds to access grammar school.”

The report found that at grammar schools, just 2.8% of children were on free school meals compared to 13.4% in non-selective schools. But it also found there were far fewer children who received pupil premium funding at grammars – 6.3% – than at non-selective schools, where the figure was 27%.

Cllr Jenny Whittle

Pupil premium funding is given to schools to narrow the standards gap between poorer children and their peers.

Cllr Whittle said that while there was evidence of good partnerships between primary schools and grammars, it was not the case across the county.

She said: “That just 57% of high ability children in receipt of Pupil Premium in Kent attend a grammar school, compared to 79% of similar ability children not eligible for Pupil Premium, highlights that concerted action needs to be taken to ensure that more academically able children from poorer backgrounds have the same access to selective education as their more affluent peers.”

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