Pupils from poorer families in rural schools get lower exam results than their counterparts in urban areas – and experts say it is because the government does not have a “nuanced view” of poverty.
New figures show that schools in countryside and coastal areas are finding it particularly difficult to break the link between poverty and low attainment, even compared to those in all other areas who are similarly disadvantaged.
Local authorities in the countryside were found to report the strongest correlation between the number of pupils on free school meals and lower GCSE grades.
However schools in urban settlements like Bradford and Watford were not far behind poorer rural areas, with the second highest correlation between deprivation and attainment.
In a report for thinktank LKMco, director Loic Menzies outlined the “striking differences” between ‘ethnically diverse cosmopolitan’ areas with high poverty levels (including Greater London and Birmingham) and those separate from towns and cities.
Menzies said: “It seems that low attainment in rural, high-deprivation secondary schools is not just about pupils having low starting points. Instead, there is an important link between school deprivation level and progress rates.”