GCSE tables: Sponsored academy results fall more

Henry Stewart's picture
 10
Regular LSN readers will know that each year, when the GCSE school league tables are published, I carry out an analysis of the comparative performance of sponsored academies and similar community schools. In the past this has been in response to exaggerated claims from the Secretary of State about the academy performance.

No such claims appear to have been made this year. This could be because Nicky Morgan has a different approach to Michael Gove. Or it could be because, even comparing all sponsored academies to all community schools, the academies did worse. As has been widely noted the 2014 GCSE figures, with equivalents largely removed, are lower than in 2013. The average fall at sponsored academies was 5.6%, compared to 4.4% at community schools (and 4.2% at converter academies).

To compare similar schools, I have banded them according to their 2013 results. In every band the figures for community schools fell less than (or, in one band, rose more than) in the sponsored academies. This was perhaps to be expected, as it was widely known that sponsored academies made far greater use of GCSE equivalents:



 

As in previous years there is an inverse relationship between last year’s results and the change from 2013 to 2014. Those with GCSE results below 40% did, on average, increase their figures. Those above saw their figures, on average, an increasing fall in line with the level of the 2013 results (until the 80%+ band).



This is my quick initial analysis of the results. Watch this space for more to come.
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
Category: 

Be notified by email of each new post.





Comments

Roger Titcombe's picture
Thu, 29/01/2015 - 20:09

Well done Henry. We used to hear nothing from New Labour except the continual repetition of the mantra that, 'Academies are improving faster than LA schools'. PWC were wheeled out to support the claim. What would they know about how the 'improvement' was achieved?

Well now we know that they are in fact declining faster than LA schools and this time it's the truth.

Janet Downs's picture
Fri, 30/01/2015 - 15:34

Roger - as you know, we (and others) have long pointed out that the superior improvement rate of sponsored academies when judged against all other school was misleading because sponsored academies, usually previously underperforming schools, started from a lower base (never mind the heavier use of equivalent exams). Even when Henry round the improvement rate in similar non-academies (ie previously underpeforming schools) was the same as, if not better, than in sponsored academies, the Gov't kept repeating the line that sponsored academies improve faster than council-run schools.

So I had to laugh at the DfE response to Hunt's criticism of Gov't policies. The spokesperson said:

'Hunt did not appear to understand that sponsored academies would improve faster because they had further to go...'


Janet Downs's picture
Fri, 30/01/2015 - 16:02

There are, of course, equivalent exams and equivalent exams. The equivalent exams which inflated a school's headline results were those vocational exams which were given an 'equivalent' value of, say, two or four GCSEs. Some of these exams would have been poor value; others would have been valuable exams but more appropriate for further education or on-the-job training. Schools can still offer these exams but they've lost their equivalent status.

The other type of equivalent exams were what are now being described as 'unregulated IGCSEs'. This Government allowed IGCSEs to count towards league tables in 2010 to create a level playing field between independent and state schools, the Gov't said. Nick Gibb said at the time the Gov't had no business telling school what exams to take.

Complete turnaround - IGCSEs are now out. But they're still OK for independent schools, said Nicky Morgan in the DT, because independent schools have 'different needs' to the state sector and the Gov't 'respected that'.

But the removal of IGCSEs is having an odd effect and one that might render league tables meaningless. Bourne Grammar School, for example, is listed in league tables as the worst-performing school in Lincolnshire with a 0% result. This is nonsense of course. 98% (as you'd expect in a selective school) achieved 5+ GCSEs A*-C in 2014.


Janet Downs's picture
Fri, 30/01/2015 - 16:16

And still politicians push out the same mantra about the superiority of sponsored academies over non-academies. This was Baroness Garden of Frognal (Lib Dem) in the Lords yesterday:

'As sponsored academies mature, they continue to improve. In sponsored academies open for three years, the proportion of pupils achieving five good GCSEs including English and maths has increased at double the rate in local authority maintained schools...'

29 Jan 2015 : Column 404

And she displayed the same statistical ignorance about the importance of sample size when she judged the proportion of a small number of inspected free schools (fewer than 100) which are good or better against the proportion of a huge number of inspected non-free schools (thousands).


John Mountford's picture
Fri, 30/01/2015 - 22:02

In the latest report to be published by the Public Accounts Committee, 'School Oversight and Intervention', the government came in for a panning for neglecting proper oversight for some schools in England - yes, you've guessed it ACADEMIES!

"Problems in some schools in England are going undetected "until serious damage has been done", MPs say."

Read more about it here:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-31044929

But the DfE is blighted by the same condition as the good Baroness Garden of Frognal - can't contain their enthusiasm for all things academy and can't see further than the gates to the nearest academy school. To put it another way, they are all suffering from HSDS, heavily selected data syndrome!!

In case you think I'm exaggerating, the PAC reported, via Committee chairman Margaret Hodge:

"The Department for Education has focused on increasing schools' autonomy but it has done so without a proper strategy for overseeing the system. Confusion about the roles and responsibilities of the Department, the Education Funding Agency, local authorities and academy sponsors has allowed some schools to fall through gaps in the system, meaning failure can go unnoticed."

She added: "We hope that the Department will respond to our recommendations fully in order to reduce the likelihood of further unforeseen school scandals, like the 'Trojan horse' affair in Birmingham.""

Pretty damning, right. But, fear not the ever-present DfE spokesperson, (fondly referred to by those not under the spell of academisation as, the purveyor of lies and damn lies) was quick to respond, saying the report "does not reflect the real picture in England's classrooms". To make it even clearer to doubters like yours truly, they went on to emphasise the point even more, The Department for Education disagreed with the committee's assessment, saying it had a "strong oversight of schools". (it's just a meddling bunch of cross-party MP's right. So what?)

"We have already intervened in more than 1,000 schools over the past four years; pairing them up with excellent sponsors to give pupils the best chances.

"That compares with the years and even decades of neglect many schools suffered under local authority control."

There's nothing like playing the LA card!

As ever in these cases (increasing in both number and seriousness by the hour) it's a matter of 'buyer beware' (that's the taxpayer, of course).

I will leave the last word to the Committee, here offering an explanation for the problem facing the system. The DfE's "narrow focus, on exam results and Ofsted inspections, meant it had "not spotted important failures" in some areas until it was too late,"

Janet Downs's picture
Sat, 31/01/2015 - 08:14

Thanks, John. I loved the DfE comment. It told the BBC that there were '41 local authority schools that have been in special measures for more than 18 months, compared to just nine academies.'

But there are more than four times the number of non-academies (17,300) to academies (4,200), so the proportion which have been in special measures for more than a year-and-a-half is roughly the same.

Funny how the DfE continues to rely on people's ignorance of stats. Or is it because the DfE itself is ignorant? Perhaps the DfE should attempt my statistics quiz.


Janet Downs's picture
Sat, 31/01/2015 - 08:24

John - your suspicion that the DfE considers select committees and the like as 'just a meddling bunch of cross-party MPs' is confirmed by Gove's attitude towards them. In November 2012 Gove attacked the Public Accounts Committee and the National Audit Office after they'd both issued critical report. Gove said they were too risk averse (ie cautious about how taxpayers' money is spent) and he wanted to move 'further, faster, now'.

But now we're discovering the truth of the saying, 'Fools rush in...'. The sorcerer's apprentice may have been dismissed but the mess he made is toxic. The more fragrant Morgan can't disguise that.


John Mountford's picture
Fri, 30/01/2015 - 22:07

P.S.

See the full report here - a long haul but well worth the effort.

http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/commons-sele...

… GCSE tables: Sponsored academy results fall more. …


Janet Downs's picture
Mon, 02/02/2015 - 08:41

Henry - Cameron's still pushing academy conversion and sponsorship as a cure for 'mediocrity'. This is despite evidence going back pre-2010 that academy conversion wasn't a panacea for school improvement never mind the increasing volume of research and analysis (including your own which the Ed Select Committee said had been referred to by several witnesses in their investigation of academies and free schools) which confirms academy conversion is no magic bullet. (It's also the most 'resource intensive' of DfE initiatives, the Committee said.).

I suppose there's no chance that Cameron, Gibb, Morgan, Nash and Gove (apparently still pulling the strings) will take any notice.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-31087137

Add new comment

Already a member? Click here to log in before you comment. Or register with us.