The effect of changes in published secondary school admissions on pupil composition
Top Cited Papers
- 1 May 2012
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Education Policy
- Vol. 27 (3) , 349-366
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02680939.2011.604137
Abstract
Data from three school admissions surveys and the National Pupil Database are combined to investigate whether changes to the School Admissions Code appear to have altered the published admissions policies and the social composition of particular schools. We show that the 2003 and 2007 School Admissions Codes appear to have been at least in part responsible for changes in the social composition of pupils at schools with criteria and arrangements that were subsequently deemed inadmissible. Although the average impact is relatively small, the direction of the impact is consistent with the observation that school segregation across England has declined a little at the same time that regulations were tightening. Our regression analysis of changes in individual school compositions is able to show this relationship holds even when changes in neighbourhood composition are accounted for. These measured associations that we identify suggest that, if the differentiation of school intakes is a concern, then regulating admission arrangements does appear to have an impact.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Is children's free school meal ‘eligibility’ a good proxy for family income?British Educational Research Journal, 2010
- Why are English secondary schools socially segregated?Journal of Education Policy, 2010
- Social segregation in secondary schools: how does England compare with other countries?Oxford Review of Education, 2008
- What should an index of school segregation measure?Oxford Review of Education, 2007
- Are Schools Drifting Apart? Intake Stratification in English Secondary SchoolsUrban Studies, 2007
- Allocating Pupils to Their Nearest Secondary School: The Consequences for Social and Ability StratificationUrban Studies, 2007
- SCHOOL CHOICE, EQUITY AND SOCIAL JUSTICE: THE CASE FOR MORE CONTROLBritish Journal of Educational Studies, 2006
- School admissions and ‘selection’ in comprehensive schools: policy and practiceOxford Review of Education, 2004
- Modelling Social SegregationOxford Review of Education, 2003