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21 Mar 2024

New research shows that reducing stigma of poverty in schools improves maths and reading

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Primary school pupils

New research shows that reducing the stigma of poverty in schools improves maths and reading

Research funded by the NIHR Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) North East and North Cumbria (NENC) has identified a link between reducing the stigma of poverty in schools and the reading and maths attainment of pupils.

One in three UK children are currently living in poverty. The research, led by academics at Newcastle University, found that whilst schools cannot tackle poverty, they can make changes that tackle the stigma of poverty, which can make the school environment more equal for pupils, and improve learning.

The work, which has been shared in an article published by Science Direct – Does tackling poverty related barriers to education improve school outcomes?  analysed the impact of Poverty Proofing© the school day.

Poverty Proofing© the school day is a nationally recognised programme that works with schools to remove barriers for students living in poverty.

The research team looked at primary schools in the North East, comparing 38 primary schools that had recently undergone Poverty Proofing, to the region’s other 292 primary schools.

They found that pupils from all financial backgrounds benefitted from improvements in attainment. Over a two-year period, after schools took action to remove barriers for those living in poverty, scores improved by approximately 5%.

To confirm this trend, the team separately analysed groups of children who received free school meals and therefore most likely to be living in poverty, and those who were not. The research pointed to a potential improvement in engagement in learning as a result of a reduction in disruptions caused by the consequences of poverty.

The work was led by Dr Morgan Beeson and Professor John Wildman, from Newcastle University Business School, and Dr Josephine Wildman.

John Wildman, Professor of Economics at Newcastle University said: “Poverty is a trap that weighs heavily on children. If schools can make sure that poverty is left at the school gate, our results suggest that educational outcomes can improve and perhaps, in the long run, help pupils escape that trap.”

Morgan Beeson, Research Associate at Newcastle University, said: “What makes this research exciting is that by supporting children most impacted by poverty, the school environment can be made better for every child. The substantial impact on children’s learning underscores the urgent need for policy makers to consider interventions like Poverty Proofing.”

The research was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Applied Research Collaboration (ARC North East and North Cumbria (NENC).

Lorna Nicoll, Operations Lead – Poverty Proofing at Children North East, said: “Every year our teams speak to over 30,000 children, families and staff about the impact finances have on their experiences of the school day. Time and time again we see financial pressures impacting pupils’ opportunity to thrive, whether through hunger, lack of learning resources, bullying or missing out on special moments. It is a huge milestone for researchers to demonstrate the link between our work removing those barriers and the educational outcomes and attendance of children in school.”

Changes schools have made as part of Poverty Proofing include making it harder to identify children accessing free school meals, ensuring that all cost-related support is given discretely, minimising or eliminating curriculum and after school clubs costs and giving families long notice periods about costs so they can financially plan.

Read a plain language summary of the research findings

You can read the full research article here.

Image credit: Shutterstock (purchased on licence)