36 results on '"Strand, Steve"'
Search Results
2. Proficiency in English is a better predictor of educational achievement than English as an Additional Language (EAL).
- Author
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Hessel, Annina K. and Strand, Steve
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ABILITY , *ACADEMIC achievement , *HETEROGENEITY , *CLASSROOMS , *ENGLISH language - Abstract
We compared two tools that have been used to capture the linguistic heterogeneity and achievement of students in England: the exposure-based distinction between English as an additional language (EAL) and monolingual learners, and the 2017–2018 five level teacher rating of proficiency in English (from "New to English" to "Fluent"). Based on a nationally representative sample of 140,000 students aged 5 to 16 years, we assessed the explanatory power of the proficiency in English rating in relation to educational achievement and compared it directly to EAL status. Our results demonstrate that proficiency in English is a significantly better predictor of student achievement than EAL status and that it accounts for up to six times more variance than other student background variables (ethnicity, gender and socio-economic disadvantage) combined. Proficiency in English was particularly (but certainly not solely) predictive for student performance in subjects such as English and reading vis-à-vis mathematics. Our findings are clear in demonstrating the value of a proficiency in English rating for assessing linguistic heterogeneity and student achievement, in contrast to the exposure-based EAL measure. We recommend the (re)introduction of proficiency in English ratings to monitor and support student progress and discuss the value of classroom-based language assessments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. Physical activity predicts task‐related behaviour, affect and tiredness in the primary school classroom: A within‐person experiment.
- Author
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Heemskerk, Christina, Strand, Steve, and Malmberg, Lars‐Erik
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PHYSICAL education , *PSYCHOLOGY of students , *PHYSICAL activity , *CLASSROOM activities , *STUDENT interests , *SCHOOL children - Abstract
Aim: We investigated the dose–response relationship between acute physical activity (PA) intensity during physical education (PE) lessons (dose), and task behaviour and learning experiences in the classroom after PE (response), and mediation effects of acute PA on‐task behaviour via learning experiences. Method: A total of 78 children (Mage = 9.30 years; 43 females) took part. Participants reported learning experiences (tiredness, positive and negative affect) during one afternoon per week for 6 weeks. Their task behaviour was observed (on‐task, active off‐task and passive off‐task) during two classroom lessons. Between the classroom lessons, they took part in a PE lesson, with experimentally induced PA intensity (low, medium and high). Accelerometers were worn for 24 h leading up to and during every intervention afternoon. Participants completed self‐reports three times per classroom lesson, both before and after PE. Intra‐ and interindividual differences in PA, task behaviour and learning experiences were analysed with multilevel structural equation models. Results: Moderate PA directly increased on‐task behaviour and reduced passive off‐task behaviour, whereas light PA increased active off‐task behaviour and reduced on‐task behaviour. We found no direct effects of vigorous PA or mediated effects of any PA intensity on‐task‐related behaviour. However, a greater positive affect during PE indirectly led to more on‐task and less passive off‐task behaviour. Regularly active children reported less tiredness in the classroom. Conclusion: PE lessons can increase on‐task behaviour and reduce both passive and active off‐task behaviours. Positive affect and tiredness are indirectly involved in the impact of PA on task‐related behaviour. The greatest benefits were found for moderate PA and for PE lessons, which left children feeling positive. Moreover, regular participation in moderate‐to‐vigorous PA leads children to feel less tired during school lessons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. Ethnic Disproportionality in the Identification of High-Incidence Special Educational Needs: A National Longitudinal Study Ages 5 to 11.
- Author
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Strand, Steve and Lindorff, Ariel
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LONGITUDINAL method , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) , *AGE - Abstract
We used pupil-level data from the National Pupil Database in England to conduct a longitudinal analysis of the identification of moderate learning difficulties (MLD) and social, emotional, and mental health difficulties (SEMH) among 550,000 pupils ages 5 to 11 years. Survival analysis was used to determine the hazard ratios (HRs) for time to first identification, controlling for prior attainment and social-emotional development at age 5 as well as socioeconomic variables. For MLD, the overrepresentation of Black Caribbean and Pakistani pupils compared with White British pupils was eliminated following age 5 controls, and the predominant picture was of ethnic-minority underrepresentation. For SEMH, Black Caribbean and mixed White and Black Caribbean (MWBC) pupils continued to be overrepresented even after age 5 controls (HR = 1.36 and 1.44, respectively), although this was not true for the larger group of Black African pupils, who were underrepresented in the adjusted analyses (HR = 0.62), as were most other ethnic-minority groups. The results indicate most ethnic-minority groups are underrepresented for special educational needs after adjusting for pupil characteristics on entry to school, though this varies by ethnic group and type of need. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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5. Foreword to the fiftieth volume.
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Baird, Jo-Anne, Elliott, Victoria, and Strand, Steve
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EDUCATION , *PRIVATE education , *TEACHING - Published
- 2024
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6. School effects and ethnic, gender and socio-economic gaps in educational achievement at age 11.
- Author
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Strand, Steve
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ACHIEVEMENT gap , *EDUCATION , *ETHNICITY , *GENDER differences in education , *SOCIAL classes , *INTERSECTIONALITY , *EDUCATION & society , *ACADEMIC achievement , *CHILDREN , *PRIMARY education - Abstract
There are long-standing achievement gaps in England associated with socio-economic status (SES), ethnicity and gender, but relatively little research has evaluated interactions between these variables or explored school effects on such gaps. This paper analyses the national test results at age 7 and age 11 of 2,836 pupils attending 68 mainstream primary schools in an ethnically diverse inner London borough. The groups with the lowest educational achievement and poorest progress were both Black Caribbean and White British low SES pupils. White British middle and high SES pupils made substantially more progress than White British low SES pupils, significantly increasing the SES gap over time. However low and high SES Black pupils made equally poor progress age 7–11. School effects on pupil progress were large, but there was no evidence of differential school effectiveness in relation to SES, ethnicity or gender. Low SES pupils in the more effective schools performed significantly better than high SES pupils in the less effective schools, but all pupils (both low and high SES) benefit from attending the more effective schools and so these schools do not eliminate the SES gap. The limits to change that may be achieved by schools alone are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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7. Ethnicity, gender, social class and achievement gaps at age 16: intersectionality and ‘getting it’ for the white working class.
- Author
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Strand, Steve
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ACHIEVEMENT gap , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SOCIAL status , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *ETHNICITY , *GENDER , *CHILDREN , *TEENAGERS - Abstract
Perhaps the most prevailing inequalities in educational achievement in England are those associated with socio-economic status (SES), ethnicity and gender. However, little research has sought to compare the relative size of these gaps or to explore interactions between these factors. This paper analyses the educational achievement at age 11, 14 and 16 of over 15,000 students from the nationally representative longitudinal study of young people in England. At age 16, the achievement gap associated with social class was twice as large as the biggest ethnic gap and six times as large as the gender gap. However, the results indicate that ethnicity, gender and SES do not combine in a simple additive fashion; rather, there are substantial interactions particularly between ethnicity and SES and between ethnicity and gender. At age 16 among low SES students, all ethnic minority groups achieve significantly better than White British students (except Black Caribbean boys who do not differ from White British boys), but at high SES only Indian students outperform White British students. A similar pattern of results was apparent in terms of progress age 11–16, with White British low SES students and Black Caribbean boys (particularly the more able) making the least progress. Parents’ educational aspirations for their child and students’ own educational aspirations, academic self-concept, frequency of completing homework, truancy and exclusion could account for the minority ethnic advantage at low SES, but conditioning on such factors simultaneously indicates substantial ethnic underachievement at average and high SES. Accounts of educational achievement framed exclusively in terms of social class, ethnicity or gender are insufficient, and the results challenge educational researchers to develop more nuanced accounts of educational success or failure. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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8. Evaluation of the national roll-out of parenting programmes across England: the parenting early intervention programme (PEIP).
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Lindsay, Geoff and Strand, Steve
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PARENT-child relationships , *SPONSORS (Godparents) , *PUBLIC spending , *PUBLIC administration - Abstract
Background Evidence based parenting programmes can improve parenting skills and the behaviour of children exhibiting, or at risk of developing, antisocial behaviour. In order to develop a public policy for delivering these programmes it is necessary not only to demonstrate their efficacy through rigorous trials but also to determine that they can be rolled out on a large scale. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the UK government funded national implementation of its Parenting Early Intervention Programme, a national roll-out of parenting programmes for parents of children 8-13 years in all 152 local authorities (LAs) across England. Building upon our study of the Pathfinder (2006-08) implemented in 18 LAs. To the best of our knowledge this is the first comparative study of a national roll-out of parenting programmes and the first study of parents of children 8-13 years. Methods The UK government funded English LAs to implement one or more of five evidence based programmes (later increased to eight): Triple P, Incredible Years, Strengthening Families Strengthening Communities, Families and Schools Together (FAST), and the Strengthening Families Programme (10-14). Parents completed measures of parenting style (laxness and over-reactivity), and mental well-being, and also child behaviour at three time points: pre- and post-course and again one year later. Results 6143 parents of 43 LAs were included in the study for whom 3325 provided post-test data and 1035 parents provided data at one-year follow up. There were significant improvements for each programme, with effect sizes (Cohen's d) for the combined sample of 0.72 parenting laxness, 0.85 parenting over-reactivity, 0.79 parent mental well-being, and 0.45 for child conduct problems. These improvements were largely maintained one year later. All four programmes for which we had sufficient data for comparison were effective. There were generally larger effects on both parent and child measures for Triple P, but not all between programme comparisons were significant. Results for the targeted group of parents of children 8-13 years were very similar. Conclusions Evidence-based parenting programmes can be rolled out effectively in community settings on a national scale. This study also demonstrates the impact of research on shaping government policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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9. Tapestry and the aesthetics of theatre in education as dialogic encounter and civil exchange.
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Winston, Joe and Strand, Steve
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DRAMA in education , *EDUCATIONAL programs , *THEATER audiences , *SOCIAL exchange , *EXTREMISTS - Abstract
This article is based upon research into a participatory Theatre in Education (TiE) programme that toured the West Midlands in 2009, funded by the UK's PREVENT initiative intended to counter the radicalisation of young British nationals by extremist political groups. The article provides a summary of the TiE programme and then presents quantitative data to demonstrate its success in terms of its ability to both provoke and entertain the young audiences whom it engaged with. The article then goes on to examine qualitative data gathered from two contrasting schools in an attempt to theorise why and in what ways it was successful as both a social exchange and an aesthetic event. In this the authors draw heavily from a recent work by Richard Sennett and propose that the programme constitutes the kind of dialogic encounter and civil exchange that he suggests we need in order to foster forms of cooperation and dialogue within the social and cultural complexities of the modern world. At the heart of this dialogue, we suggest, is the playful charm of actor-teachers and the productively cool dynamic they can bring to bear when working with highly emotive and politically charged issues. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2013
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10. The White British–Black Caribbean achievement gap: tests, tiers and teacher expectations.
- Author
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Strand, Steve
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ACADEMIC achievement , *EDUCATIONAL programs , *LITERACY programs , *EDUCATIONAL background , *EDUCATION , *BRITISH education system - Abstract
A recent analysis of the Longitudinal Study of Young People in England (LSYPE) indicates a White British–Black Caribbean achievement gap at age 14 which cannot be accounted for by socio‐economic variables or a wide range of contextual factors. This article uses the LSYPE to analyse patterns of entry to the different tiers of national mathematics and science tests at age 14. Each tier gives access to a limited range of outcomes with the highest test outcomes achievable only if students are entered by their teachers to the higher tiers. The results indicate that Black Caribbean students are systematically under‐represented in entry to the higher tiers relative to their White British peers. This gap persists after controls for prior attainment, socio‐economic variables and a wide range of pupil, family, school and neighbourhood factors. Differential entry to test tiers provides a window on teacher expectation effects which may contribute to the achievement gap. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
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11. The limits of social class in explaining ethnic gaps in educational attainment.
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Strand, Steve
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EDUCATIONAL attainment , *ACHIEVEMENT gap , *EDUCATION , *SOCIAL classes , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MINORITY students , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
This paper reports an analysis of the educational attainment and progress between age 11 and age 14 of over 14,500 students from the nationally representative Longitudinal Study of Young People in England. The mean attainment gap in national tests at age 14 between White British and several ethnic minority groups was large, more than three times the size of the gender gap, but at the same time only about one-third of the size of the social class gap. Socioeconomic variables could account for the attainment gaps for Black African, Pakistani and Bangladeshi students, but not for Black Caribbean students. Further controls for parental and student attitudes, expectations and behaviours indicated minority ethnic groups were on average more advantaged on these measures than White British students, but this was not reflected proportionately in their levels of attainment. Black Caribbean students were distinctive as the only group making less progress than White British students between age 11 and 14 and this could not be accounted for by any of the measured contextual variables. Possible explanations for the White British-Black Caribbean gap are considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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12. Do some schools narrow the gap? Differential school effectiveness by ethnicity, gender, poverty, and prior achievement.
- Author
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Strand, Steve
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ETHNICITY , *GENDER , *POVERTY , *UNDERACHIEVEMENT , *ACADEMIC improvement , *SCHOOL children , *EFFECTIVE teaching , *EDUCATIONAL quality - Abstract
This study analyses the educational progress of an entire national cohort of over 530,000 pupils in England between age 7 in 2000 and age 11 in 2004. The results show that Black Caribbean boys not entitled to free school meals, and particularly the more able pupils, made significantly less progress than their White British peers. There is no evidence that the gap results from Black Caribbean pupils attending less effective schools. There is also no evidence of differential effectiveness in relation to ethnic group; schools that were strong in facilitating the progress of White British pupils were equally strong in facilitating the progress of Black Caribbean pupils. There was some evidence of differential school effectiveness by pupil prior achievement, gender, and poverty, but the absolute sizes of the effects were small. The results suggest the poor progress of Black Caribbean pupils reflects a systemic issue rather than the influence of a small number of “low quality” schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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13. Evidence of Ethnic Disproportionality in Special Education in an English Population.
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Strand, Steve and Lindsay, Geoff
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SPECIAL education research , *DISABLED minorities , *RATIO & proportion , *MINORITIES , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EDUCATION & demography , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *BRITISH students - Abstract
Differences in the proportions of students identified as having special educational needs (SENs) across ethnic groups have historically been of concern in the United Kingdom and the United States. However, the absence of student-level data has hindered investigation of the reasons for such disproportionality. The authors present an analysis of the 2005 Pupil Level Annual School Census for 6.5 million students aged 5 to 16 years in England. Logistic regression analyses were completed to calculate the odds ratios of having identified SENs both before and after adjusting for the influence of age, gender, and socioeconomic disadvantage (poverty). Poverty and gender had stronger associations than ethnicity with the overall prevalence of SENs. However, after controlling for these effects, significant over- and underrepresentation of some minority ethnic groups relative to White British students remained. The nature and degree of these disproportionalities varied across categories of SENs and minority ethnic groups and were not restricted to judgmental categories of SENs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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14. The links between handwriting and composing for Y6 children.
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Medwell, Jane, Strand, Steve, and Wray, David
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PRIMARY education , *LITERACY , *READING , *BRITISH education system ,WRITING - Abstract
Although handwriting is often considered a matter of presentation, a substantial body of international research suggests that the role of handwriting in children's composing has been neglected. Automaticity in handwriting is now seen as of key importance in composing but this proposition is relatively untested in the UK and the assumption has been made that by Y6, handwriting is a matter of presentation, unrelated to composition processes. This article reports the results of a study into the handwriting speed and orthographic motor integration of 198 Y6 children in relation to their composition and relates it to findings from an earlier paper about 179 Y2 children. The study suggests that handwriting is an important factor in the composition of Y6 children and that a proportion of children suffer from low levels of handwriting automaticity, which may be interfering with their composition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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15. Surveying the views of pupils attending supplementary schools in England.
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Strand, Steve
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ETHNIC schools , *EDUCATIONAL evaluation , *STUDENT attitudes , *ACADEMIC achievement , *CULTURAL education , *ETHNICITY , *BRITISH education system , *EDUCATION research - Abstract
Background Supplementary schooling broadly refers to extra schooling organized by and for particular ethnic groups outside of mainstream provision. Purpose This is the first study to systematically explore the attitudes of pupils attending supplementary schools in England and the largest ever UK study of supplementary schools and their pupils. Sample The sample comprised 772 pupils aged 5–16 years attending 63 supplementary schools in four major cities in England. Design and methods Pupils completed a questionnaire to determine their attitudes to mainstream and to supplementary school; their attitudes to and self-evaluation of their achievement in reading and mathematics; their attitude to learning and learning activities; their reasons for attending supplementary school; and their likes and dislikes about supplementary school, as well as other pupil background data. Statistical analyses explored the effect of age, gender and length of attendance in relation to questionnaire responses. Results and conclusions Pupils attending supplementary schools experience extremely high levels of educational disadvantage well above the national average. Pupils were very positive in their attitudes to supplementary school, and from age 7 upwards were significantly more positive about supplementary school than they were about mainstream school. Pupils valued gaining general support for their educational improvement, a deeper understanding of their home language or culture, specific help with learning English and mathematics, help with other mainstream school work, social activities, using computers and ICT, and the positive support of their supplementary school teachers. The pupils who had been attending a supplementary school the longest had the highest scores for attitudes to learning and learning activities, and attitudes to and evaluation of their achievement in maths. However, further research is needed to identify any causal linkage between supplementary schooling and education-related outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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16. Intelligence and educational achievement
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Deary, Ian J., Strand, Steve, Smith, Pauline, and Fernandes, Cres
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INTELLECT , *ACADEMIC achievement , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *PERSONALITY , *EXAMINATIONS - Abstract
Abstract: This 5-year prospective longitudinal study of 70,000+ English children examined the association between psychometric intelligence at age 11 years and educational achievement in national examinations in 25 academic subjects at age 16. The correlation between a latent intelligence trait (Spearman''s g from CAT2E) and a latent trait of educational achievement (GCSE scores) was 0.81. General intelligence contributed to success on all 25 subjects. Variance accounted for ranged from 58.6% in Mathematics and 48% in English to 18.1% in Art and Design. Girls showed no advantage in g, but performed significantly better on all subjects except Physics. This was not due to their better verbal ability. At age 16, obtaining five or more GCSEs at grades A⁎–C is an important criterion. 61% of girls and 50% of boys achieved this. For those at the mean level of g at age 11, 58% achieved this; a standard deviation increase or decrease in g altered the values to 91% and 16%, respectively. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
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17. Sex differences in Cognitive Abilities Test scores: A UK national picture.
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Strand, Steve, Deary, Ian J., and Smith, Pauline
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COGNITIVE Abilities Test , *COGNITIVE ability , *COGNITIVE testing , *SCHOOL children , *REASONING , *ACADEMIC achievement , *TEST scoring , *ANALYSIS of variance , *STANDARD deviations ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
Background and aims. There is uncertainty about the extent or even existence of sex differences in the mean and variability of reasoning test scores ( Jensen, 1998; Lynn, 1994, 1998; Mackintosh, 1996). This paper analyses the Cognitive Abilities Test (CAT) scores of a large and representative sample of UK pupils to determine the extent of any sex differences. Sample. A nationally representative UK sample of over 320,000 school pupils aged 11-12 years was assessed on the CAT (third edition) between September 2001 and August 2003. The CAT includes separate nationally standardized tests for verbal, quantitative, and non-verbal reasoning. The size and recency of the sample is unprecedented in research on this issue. Methods. The sheer size of the sample ensures that any sex difference will achieve statistical significance. Therefore, effect sizes (d) and variance ratios (VR) are employed to evaluate the magnitude of sex differences in mean scores and in score variability, respectively. Results. The mean verbal reasoning score for girls was 2.2 standard score points higher than the mean for boys, but only 0.3 standard points in favour of girls for nonverbal reasoning (NVR), and 0.7 points in favour of boys for quantitative reasoning (QR). However, for all three tests there were substantial sex differences in the standard deviation of scores, with greater variance among boys. Boys were over represented relative to girls at both the top and the bottom extremes for all tests, with the exception of the top 10% in verbal reasoning. Conclusions. Given the small differences in means, explanations for sex differences in wider domains such examination attainment at age 16 need to look beyond conceptions of ‘ability’. Boys tend to be both the lowest and the highest performers in terms of their reasoning abilities, which warns against the danger of stereotyping boys as low achievers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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18. Pupil mobility, attainment and progress in primary school.
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Strand, Steve and Demie, Feyisa
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STUDENT mobility , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *PRIMARY education , *KEY Stage Two National Tests , *ELEMENTARY education , *ACADEMIC achievement , *INTERNAL migration , *TRANSFER of students , *ELEMENTARY schools - Abstract
This article presents an analysis of the association between pupil mobility and educational attainment in the 2002 national end of Key Stage 2 (KS2) tests for 11‐year‐old pupils in an inner London education authority. The results show that pupil mobility is strongly associated with low attainment in the end of key stage tests. However, the negative association with pupil mobility is reduced by half when account is taken of other pupil background factors known to be related to educational attainment (such as special educational need and socio‐economic disadvantage), and is eliminated entirely when account is also taken of pupils' prior attainment as indicated by end of KS1 test scores at age 7. Thus there is no indication that changing school has a negative impact on educational progress during primary school. Pupils who join their school during KS2 from other schools in England are more likely to be ‘at risk’ of low attainment due to higher levels of socio‐economic disadvantage, a greater need for support in relation to English as an additional language, a higher incidence and greater severity of special educational needs and pre‐existing low attainment at the end of KS1. A key factor in understanding the relationship between mobility and attainment is the reason for mobility. One‐third of mobile pupils had arrived from schools outside of England, often as refugees, asylum seekers or economic migrants, and these pupils accounted for the major part of the effect ascribed to ‘pupil mobility’. The low attainment of these pupils is the result not of ‘changing school’ but of a broad range of factors including substantial cultural, educational and social adjustment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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19. Comparing the predictive validity of reasoning tests and national end of Key Stage 2 tests: which tests are the ‘best’?
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Strand, Steve
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EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *SCHOOL children , *LEARNING , *COGNITIVE testing , *INTELLIGENCE tests , *ABILITY testing , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
This article describes a longitudinal analysis of a nationally representative cohort of over 80,000 pupils in England who completed both national end of Key Stage 2 (KS2) tests and the Cognitive Abilities Test (CAT) at age 11 in 1997, national end of Key Stage 3 (KS3) tests at age 14 in summer 2000 and General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) and other public examinations at age 16 in summer 2002. The CAT had significantly higher correlations with subsequent KS3 and GCSE outcomes than did KS2 test points scores. However, multiple regression analyses indicated that a combination of CAT and KS2 test scores gave the best prediction of future KS3\GCSE outcomes. The article argues that measures of both pupils' general transferable learning abilities, and measures of specific curricular attainments at the end of primary school have unique and distinct value at the start of the secondary phase. The article discusses some practical ways in which the different types of assessment data can be used within the secondary school. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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20. Consistency in reasoning test scores over time.
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Strand, Steve
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COGNITIVE Abilities Test , *COGNITIVE consistency , *REASONING , *EXAMINATIONS , *SECONDARY education - Abstract
Background. UK schools have a long history of using reasoning tests, most frequently of Verbal Reasoning (VR), Non-Verbal Reasoning (NVR), and to a lesser extent Quantitative Reasoning (QR). Results are used for identifying students' learning needs, for grouping students, for identifying underachievement and for providing indicators of future academic performance. Despite this widespread use there are little empirical data on the long-term consistency of VR, QR and NVR as discrete abilities. Aims. To evaluate and compare the consistency of VR, QR and NVR scores over a 3- year period, and to explore the influence of the secondary school on pupils' progress in the tests. Sample. Data were collected on a longitudinal sample of over 10,000 pupils who completed the Cognitive Abilities Test Second Edition in year 6 (age 10+) and year 9 (age 13+), and GCSE public examinations in year II (age 15+). Methods. Correlation coefficients and change scores for individual pupils are calculated. Multilevel modelling is used to determine school effects on reasoning scores and GCSE public examination results. Results. The results reveal high correlations in scores over time, ranging from .87 for VR to .76 for NVR, but also show around one-sixth of pupils on the VR test and one- fifth of pupils on the QR and NVR tests change their scores by 10 or more standard score points. Schools account for only a small part of the total variation in reasoning score, although they account for a much greater proportion of the variation in measures of attainment such as GCSE. School effects on pupils' progress in the reasoning tests between age 10 and age 13 are relatively modest Conclusions. Reasoning tests make excellent baseline assessments for secondary schools. Some practical and policy implications for schools are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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21. Pupil Mobility, Attainment and Progress During Key Stage 1: a study in cautious interpretation.
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Strand, Steve
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STUDENT mobility , *ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
This article explores the association between pupil mobility and attainment in national end of Key Stage 1 (KS1) tests for over 6000 pupils in an English urban education authority. The results indicate that pupil mobility during the early years is associated with significantly lower levels of pupil attainment in reading, writing and mathematics tests at age 7. However, mobile pupils are more likely than stable pupils to be entitled to free school meals, to have English as an additional language, to require higher levels of support in learning English, to have identified and more severe special educational needs and to have higher levels of absence. When the relative impact of these factors is considered, the effect of mobility, while still statistically significant, is substantially reduced. When pupil's baseline assessment results are also included in order to assess educational progress between the age of 4 and 7 years, mobility has a significant effect only on progress in mathematics, and even here the impact is low relative to other pupil background factors. The article concludes that the direct effect of mobility on pupil attainment is likely to be small. However, the implications of mobility for school and classroom management, planning and resourcing are substantial. Examples of good practice and implications for policy are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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22. Baseline assessment results at age 4: associations with pupil background factors.
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Strand, Steve
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LITERACY , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Wandsworth Local Education Authority first introduced baseline assessment for all 4-year-olds entering primary school reception classes in Autumn 1992. Assessment of early literacy skills forms a central part of this, and methods include both structured teacher observation and a standardised assessment (the LARR Test of Emergent Literacy). This paper reports the baseline results for over 11,000 children who were assessed between 1993 and 1997. Results indicate significant variations in baseline attainment associated with pupils’ age, sex, length of nursery education, economic disadvantage, ethnic group and home language. The results also reveal complex interactions between these factors which are important for a full understanding of pupils’ attainment at this early age. At the school level, baseline results varied widely across schools with similar proportions of pupils entitled to free school meals and English as an additional language. This result urges caution in the interpretation of the benchmark data published by the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA, 1998). Data on pupils’ progress from baseline to the end of Key Stage 1 are summarised and the implications discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
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23. Ethnic Group, Sex and Economic Disadvantage: associations with pupils' educational progress from Baseline to the end of Key Stage 1.
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Strand, Steve
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ETHNIC groups , *SCHOOL children - Abstract
Provides information on a study which reported an analysis of the educational progress made by pupils between Baseline assessment at age four and national end of Key Stage 1 (KS1) tests at age seven. Studies which show that differences in pupils' educational attainments related to ethnic group, economic disadvantage and sex occur as early as seven years of age; Methodology; Progress during KS1; Discussion.
- Published
- 1999
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24. Pupil progress during Key Stage 1: A value added analysis of school effects.
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Strand, Steve
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CURRICULUM-based assessment - Abstract
Considers pupils' results in the 1995 Key Stage 1 (KS1) tests in relation to their baseline assessment completed on entry to reception class in 1992/93 in England and Wales. Predictive validity of baseline assessment; Pupil factors; School compositional effects and pupil progress; Differences between schools; Comparison of school results for different subjects.
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- 1997
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25. A `value added' analysis of the 1996 primary school performance tables.
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Strand, Steve
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PRIMARY education , *ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
Presents an analysis of the 1996 primary school performance tables published by the British Government in March 1997. Criticism on the failure of the table to provide a measure of a school's effectiveness; Evidence of under-achievement among some groups of British pupils; Correlation between school residuals from the reasoning ability model and their raw results.
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- 1998
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26. Children in care in education: Who is entered for exams and who reaches critical thresholds of success at age 16?
- Author
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O'Higgins, Aoife, Luke, Nikki, and Strand, Steve
- Subjects
- *
GENERAL Certificate of Secondary Education , *HIGH school exams , *SECONDARY education , *CHILD care , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Being entered for exams and reaching key educational thresholds, for example 5 A* to C grades (including English and Mathematics) at GCSE, are important markers of participation and success in secondary education. However, little is known about the prevalence and make‐up of children in care reaching these thresholds. Using secondary data analysis, we compared the proportions of children in care, children 'in need' and children in the general population who achieved four key thresholds, including exam entry and 5 A* to C grades, including English and Mathematics. We then focused on children in care and examined factors that predicted exam entry and achieving 5 A* to C grades, including English and Mathematics. Children receiving social care interventions were less likely than children in the general population to be entered for exams or to reach important educational thresholds. For children in care, several socio‐demographic, care and educational factors predicted their likelihood of success. No children with an autistic spectrum disorder or who had ever been permanently excluded were recorded to have achieved 5 A* to C grades, including English and Mathematics. Children with poor attainment at Key Stage 2 were also at significant risk of not achieving this threshold. Practitioners and policymakers should consider the modifiable risk factors for poor educational performance and be aware of groups of children in care who are at significant risk of not achieving a minimum standard which could open doors for their future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Examining the concept of inverse: Theory-building via a standalone literature review.
- Author
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Cook, John Paul, Richardson, April, Strand, Steve, Reed, Zackery, and Melhuish, Kathleen
- Subjects
- *
LITERATURE reviews , *ALGEBRAIC varieties , *BINARY operations - Abstract
Inverse is a critical topic throughout the K–16 mathematics curriculum where students encounter the notion of mathematical inverse across many contexts. The literature base on inverses is substantial, yet context-specific and compartmentalized. That is, extant research examines students' reasoning with inverses within specific algebraic contexts. It is currently unclear what might be involved in productively reasoning with inverses across algebraic contexts, and whether the specific ways of reasoning from the literature can be abstracted to more general ways of reasoning about inverse. To address this issue, we conducted a standalone literature review to explicate and exemplify three cross-context ways of reasoning that, we hypothesize, can support students' productive engagement with inverses in a variety of algebraic contexts: inverse as an undoing , inverse as a manipulated element , and inverse as a coordination of the binary operation, identity, and set. Findings also include explicating affordances and constraints for each of these ways of reasoning. Finally, we reflect on when and how standalone literature reviews can serve the purpose of unifying fragmented and obscured insights about key mathematical ideas. • Conducted a standalone review of the inverses literature to identify unified ways of reasoning. • Ways of reasoning identified: inverse as an undoing, inverse as a manipulated element, inverse as a coordination. • Affordances and constraints of each way of reasoning are identified. • Moving between all three ways of reasoning is essential for productive engagement with inverses. • Standalone literature reviews are a useful tool for identifying potentially obscured insights about students' reasoning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Evaluation of the national roll-out of parenting programmes across England: the parenting early intervention programme (PEIP).
- Author
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Lindsay, Geoff and Strand, Steve
- Abstract
Background: Evidence based parenting programmes can improve parenting skills and the behaviour of children exhibiting, or at risk of developing, antisocial behaviour. In order to develop a public policy for delivering these programmes it is necessary not only to demonstrate their efficacy through rigorous trials but also to determine that they can be rolled out on a large scale. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the UK government funded national implementation of its Parenting Early Intervention Programme, a national roll-out of parenting programmes for parents of children 8-13 years in all 152 local authorities (LAs) across England. Building upon our study of the Pathfinder (2006-08) implemented in 18 LAs. To the best of our knowledge this is the first comparative study of a national roll-out of parenting programmes and the first study of parents of children 8-13 years.Methods: The UK government funded English LAs to implement one or more of five evidence based programmes (later increased to eight): Triple P, Incredible Years, Strengthening Families Strengthening Communities, Families and Schools Together (FAST), and the Strengthening Families Programme (10-14). Parents completed measures of parenting style (laxness and over-reactivity), and mental well-being, and also child behaviour at three time points: pre- and post-course and again one year later.Results: 6143 parents from 43 LAs were included in the study of whom 3325 provided post-test data and 1035 parents provided data at one-year follow up. There were significant improvements for each programme, with effect sizes (Cohen's d) for the combined sample of 0.72 parenting laxness, 0.85 parenting over-reactivity, 0.79 parent mental well-being, and 0.45 for child conduct problems. These improvements were largely maintained one year later. All four programmes for which we had sufficient data for comparison were effective. There were generally larger effects on both parent and child measures for Triple P, but not all between programme comparisons were significant. Results for the targeted group of parents of children 8-13 years were very similar.Conclusions: Evidence-based parenting programmes can be rolled out effectively in community settings on a national scale. This study also demonstrates the impact of research on shaping government policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
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29. Tackling the remaining attainment gap between students with and without immigrant background: an investigation into the equivalence of SES constructs.
- Author
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Lenkeit, Jenny, Caro, Daniel H., and Strand, Steve
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION of children of immigrants , *EDUCATIONAL attainment research , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *STUDENTS' families , *EDUCATIONAL equalization , *IMMIGRANT students - Abstract
In England, students with immigrant background exhibit lower educational attainment than those without immigrant background. Family socioeconomic status (SES) helps explain differences in educational attainment, but a gap remains that differs in size for students with different immigrant backgrounds. While the explanatory repertoire for the remaining gap is broad, it has been neglected to comprehensively investigate whether family SES constructs are equivalent across students with different immigrant backgrounds. Using data from the first wave of the Children of Immigrants Longitudinal Survey in Four European Countries (CILS4EU) for England (n= 4,315), the paper applies exploratory structural equation modelling (ESEM) to evaluate measurement invariance of family background constructs across students without and with immigrant background, specifically Pakistani/Bangladeshi immigrant background. Results suggest differences in the structure of family SES indicators across groups and in their association with educational attainment. Complementary variables are suggested to enhance family SES indicators. Findings are relevant to researchers investigating educational inequalities related to immigrant background. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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30. Longitudinal patterns of behaviour problems in children with specific speech and language difficulties: Child and contextual factors.
- Author
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Lindsay, Geoff., Dockrell, Julie E., and Strand, Steve.
- Subjects
- *
BEHAVIOR disorders in children , *EMOTIONAL problems of children , *LANGUAGE ability testing , *SPEECH education , *SPEECH disorders in children , *LEARNING disabilities , *SOCIAL interaction , *LONGITUDINAL method , *CHILD analysis - Abstract
Background. The purpose of this study was to examine the stability of behavioural, emotional and social difficulties (BESD) in children with specific speech and language difficulties (SSLD), and the relationship between BESD and the language ability. Methods. A sample of children with SSLD were assessed for BESD at ages 8, 10 and 12 years by both teachers and parents. Language abilities were assessed at 8 and 10 years. Results. High levels of BESD were found at all three ages but with different patterns of trajectories for parents' and teachers' ratings. Language ability predicted teacher- but not parent-rated BESD. Conclusions. The study confirms the persistence of high levels of BESD over the period 8-12 years and the continuing comorbidity of BESD and language difficulties but also indicates a complex interaction of within-child and contextual factors over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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31. Statistical Aspects of Baseline Assessment and its Relationship to End of Key Stage One Assessment.
- Author
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Schagen, Ian, Sainsbury, Marian, and Strand, Steve
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements , *SCHOOL children , *BASELINE assessment (Education) - Abstract
The current proliferation of baseline assessment schemes for Reception pupils has a number of aims, one of which involves the concept of 'value-added' from Reception to Key Stage 1. This paper looks at results from data collected for three baseline schemes, and investigates what can be said about national levels of performance. It also looks at evidence on relationships between baseline and Key Stage 1 test results, and critically evaluates the extent to which such data can be used for 'value-added' analyses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
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32. Intelligence: A brief history.
- Author
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Strand, Steve.
- Subjects
- *
INTELLECT , *NONFICTION - Abstract
The article reviews the book "Intelligence: A brief history," by Anna T. Cianciolo and Robert J. Stenberg.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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33. The education of children in care and children in need: Who falls behind and when?
- Author
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Sinclair, Ian, Luke, Nikki, Fletcher, John, O'Higgins, Aoife, Strand, Steve, Berridge, David, Sebba, Judy, and Thomas, Sally
- Subjects
- *
CHILD development , *CHILD welfare , *EDUCATION , *FOSTER home care , *LONGITUDINAL method , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHILDREN - Abstract
We seek to explain the development of the educational gap between children in "out‐of‐home care" (CLA), children deemed in social need (CIN), and other pupils. A cohort of 642,805 pupils aged 16 in 2013 was used to chart the educational progress of the full cohort, the CLA (n = 6,236), the CIN in 2012 or 2013 but not CLA (n = 20,384), and a sample individually matched with the CLA (n = 11,084). At age 7, attainment of the CLA and CIN was approximately 1 standard deviation lower than the cohort average and predicted attainment at 16. At this point, the persistent "CIN" (those with earlier and persistent needs) had the lowest attainment relative to others, and this declined further during secondary school. Those entering care before or during primary school had very low attainment at age 7, but their relative attainment did not decline. Attainment of CLA and CIN at age 16 likely reflects early environment, special educational needs, and poor relationships with secondary school. Policy, research, and intervention should focus on CIN as well as CLA, do so before entry to care, and take account of the onset of, and probable reasons for, educational difficulties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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34. Statistics for research: With a guide to SPSS (2nd ed.).
- Author
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Strand, Steve
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL sciences education , *NONFICTION - Abstract
Statistics for research: With a guide to SPSS (2nd ed.) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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35. Discovering statistics using SPSS (2nd edition).
- Author
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Strand, Steve
- Subjects
- *
STATISTICS , *NONFICTION - Abstract
Discovering statistics using SPSS (2nd edition) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Parenting Early Intervention Programme in England, 2006-2011; a classed experience?
- Author
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Cullen, Stephen M., Cullen, Mairi‐Ann, Lindsay, Geoff, and Strand, Steve
- Subjects
- *
FAMILY policy , *EARLY intervention (Education) , *SOCIAL classes , *PARENTING , *PARENTING education , *ADULTS , *GOVERNMENT policy ,BRITISH politics & government, 2007- - Abstract
Family policy was a key component of the 'New' Labour government's family, social and education policy, and a wide range of family focused initiatives and interventions designed to 'support' families and improve individual, family and social outcomes were introduced. The post-May 2010 coalition government's family policy exhibits key elements of policy continuity. There have been strong, class-based critiques of this approach to social policy, which have argued that policies were informed by a project to recreate the working class. A key English family policy initiative, the Parenting Early Intervention Programme ( PEIP) ran from September 2006-March 2011. The national evaluation of the PEIP was a large scale combined methods study of the implementation of parenting programmes in all local authorities in England, and forms the evidential base of this article which was built upon the completion, by participating parents, of three standardised pre and post parenting course questionnaires (N = 4446). A sample of 133 participating parents was also interviewed using semi-structured interview schedules. The evidence from the PEIP evaluation showed the heterogeneous class nature of the PEIP cohorts, which over the roll-out of the initiative, incorporated a larger number of middle class parents. In addition, the qualitative data indicated that parents had strongly positive participant perceptions of PEIP courses, characterised by 'mutual reach', and did not experience the courses in classed terms.The evidence from the quantitative and qualitative data collected for the national evaluation suggests that it is difficult to conceptualise the PEIP, as an example of the Labour government's family policy, in class terms-such an approach requires, at the least, major qualification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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