Patterns of participation in higher education for care-experienced students in England: why has there not been more progress?

<p>Children who spend time in the care of their local authority, usually due to neglect or abuse within the birth family, tend to experience significant educational disruption and have lower educational outcomes, on average, than other young people. However, little is known about those subsequ...

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Main Author: Harrison, N
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Routledge 2019
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author Harrison, N
author_facet Harrison, N
author_sort Harrison, N
collection OXFORD
description <p>Children who spend time in the care of their local authority, usually due to neglect or abuse within the birth family, tend to experience significant educational disruption and have lower educational outcomes, on average, than other young people. However, little is known about those subsequently participating in higher education, who comprise just under one percent of the student body in England.</p> <p>The paper synthesises three contrasting datasets to map participation patterns among care-experienced young people for the first time. Considerably more enter higher education than previously thought, but they remain significantly less likely to participate than other young people. Furthermore, they tend to enter later, with less prestigious qualifications and to lower status institutions.</p> <p>The paper concludes by discussing key differences between the datasets, reflecting on difficulties with identifying and recording care-experienced students which may account for an apparent lack of progress in encouraging their participation despite concerted policy efforts.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:745284ca-70a7-4188-a545-6049f7f67f552022-03-26T20:01:58ZPatterns of participation in higher education for care-experienced students in England: why has there not been more progress?Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:745284ca-70a7-4188-a545-6049f7f67f55EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordRoutledge2019Harrison, N<p>Children who spend time in the care of their local authority, usually due to neglect or abuse within the birth family, tend to experience significant educational disruption and have lower educational outcomes, on average, than other young people. However, little is known about those subsequently participating in higher education, who comprise just under one percent of the student body in England.</p> <p>The paper synthesises three contrasting datasets to map participation patterns among care-experienced young people for the first time. Considerably more enter higher education than previously thought, but they remain significantly less likely to participate than other young people. Furthermore, they tend to enter later, with less prestigious qualifications and to lower status institutions.</p> <p>The paper concludes by discussing key differences between the datasets, reflecting on difficulties with identifying and recording care-experienced students which may account for an apparent lack of progress in encouraging their participation despite concerted policy efforts.</p>
spellingShingle Harrison, N
Patterns of participation in higher education for care-experienced students in England: why has there not been more progress?
title Patterns of participation in higher education for care-experienced students in England: why has there not been more progress?
title_full Patterns of participation in higher education for care-experienced students in England: why has there not been more progress?
title_fullStr Patterns of participation in higher education for care-experienced students in England: why has there not been more progress?
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of participation in higher education for care-experienced students in England: why has there not been more progress?
title_short Patterns of participation in higher education for care-experienced students in England: why has there not been more progress?
title_sort patterns of participation in higher education for care experienced students in england why has there not been more progress
work_keys_str_mv AT harrisonn patternsofparticipationinhighereducationforcareexperiencedstudentsinenglandwhyhastherenotbeenmoreprogress