i
The
essential
daily
briefing
from
THE INDEPENDENT
Going to nursery is the key to getting good GCSEs
By Sarah Cassidy
EDUCATION CORRESPONDENT
Children who attend nursery or pre-school go on to achieve significantly better GCSE results than those who are kept at home before school age, a major study has found.
The boost from pre-school education is equivalent to gaining seven B grades at GCSE rather than seven C grades. Children who go to pre-school also develop better literacy, behaviour and concentration as teenagers, and can earn an extra £27,000 over their working lives, the research found.
“There is an enduring effect of pre-school. Attendance, quality and duration at pre-school all show long-term effects on students’ academic outcomes,” concluded a study, The Effective Pre-school, Primary and Secondary Education (EPPSE) project, which has tracked more than 3,000 youngsters since 1997.
The findings, revealed exclusively by i, show that the younger pupils were when they started pre-school - and the longer they attended - the stronger the boost to GCSE results.
However, it did not matter whether children attended pre-school full-time or part-time as the eventual gains were the same. The quality of pre-school also predicted the children’s GCSE results. Those who had attended high-quality facilities were more likely to achieve 5 A*- C including English and maths, and were also likely to show better behaviour and lower levels of hyperactivity. The Effective Pre-school and Primary Education project (EPPE) was the first major longitudinal study in Europe to investigate the impact of pre-school provision on a national sample. It has already reported the positive effect of attending pre-school on pupils aged seven, 11 and 14. Today’s findings confirm that the positive effect continued as far as GCSE. Sam Gyimah, the Childcare Minister, told i that the Government’s commitment to early-years education was helping to “level the playing field” between rich and poor. He said: “The research shows that our current policy position is supported by the evidence rather than being an ideological crusade. Today we have universal provision of pre-school for three- and four-year-olds and we are one of only 10 OECD countries where over 90 per cent of three- and four-year- olds go to pre-school. The study showed a particularly strong effect on boys’ maths results. Boys who attended a high-quality pre-school obtained higher grades in GCSE maths than either those who attended lower quality pre-school or none at all.
The
essential
daily
briefing
from
THE INDEPENDENT
Going to nursery is the key to getting good GCSEs
By Sarah Cassidy
EDUCATION CORRESPONDENT
Children who attend nursery or pre-school go on to achieve significantly better GCSE results than those who are kept at home before school age, a major study has found.
The boost from pre-school education is equivalent to gaining seven B grades at GCSE rather than seven C grades. Children who go to pre-school also develop better literacy, behaviour and concentration as teenagers, and can earn an extra £27,000 over their working lives, the research found.
“There is an enduring effect of pre-school. Attendance, quality and duration at pre-school all show long-term effects on students’ academic outcomes,” concluded a study, The Effective Pre-school, Primary and Secondary Education (EPPSE) project, which has tracked more than 3,000 youngsters since 1997.
The findings, revealed exclusively by i, show that the younger pupils were when they started pre-school - and the longer they attended - the stronger the boost to GCSE results.
However, it did not matter whether children attended pre-school full-time or part-time as the eventual gains were the same. The quality of pre-school also predicted the children’s GCSE results. Those who had attended high-quality facilities were more likely to achieve 5 A*- C including English and maths, and were also likely to show better behaviour and lower levels of hyperactivity. The Effective Pre-school and Primary Education project (EPPE) was the first major longitudinal study in Europe to investigate the impact of pre-school provision on a national sample. It has already reported the positive effect of attending pre-school on pupils aged seven, 11 and 14. Today’s findings confirm that the positive effect continued as far as GCSE. Sam Gyimah, the Childcare Minister, told i that the Government’s commitment to early-years education was helping to “level the playing field” between rich and poor. He said: “The research shows that our current policy position is supported by the evidence rather than being an ideological crusade. Today we have universal provision of pre-school for three- and four-year-olds and we are one of only 10 OECD countries where over 90 per cent of three- and four-year- olds go to pre-school. The study showed a particularly strong effect on boys’ maths results. Boys who attended a high-quality pre-school obtained higher grades in GCSE maths than either those who attended lower quality pre-school or none at all.