Our goal is to create a world-class school system that ensures every child is taught a broad and ambitious knowledge-rich curriculum by highly skilled teachers, so they can achieve their potential. We need to continue to develop the evidence base around effective teaching practice and curriculum design, with teaching increasingly viewed as an applied science (akin to medicine) where evidence-based approaches are widely utilised, and skilled teachers draw upon expert support and professional communities. We also need to build our understanding of how best to replicate the success of high performing schools, and how school trusts can improve the effectiveness and efficiency of their schools, including through management of the school estate. A key part of this is building evidence on the most successful school approaches to improving attendance.
If you would like to discuss previous, ongoing or potential research into any of the areas in this document, please contact research.engagement@education.gov.uk.
This question was published as part of the set of ARIs in this document:
This project is intended to inform public debate on how the monies committed to the Education Recovery fund (so far £1.3 billion) can best be used to support pupils in primary schools in the aftermath of the pandem...
Funded by: ESRC
Lead research organisation: University College London
Partially answers the question by focusing on local dimensions to recovery planning in schools.
When primary school children return in the Autumn, they will have missed more than a term of usual school provision. The disruption may exacerbate existing inequalities in academic attainment, and potentially create new ...
Funded by: COVID
Lead research organisation: University of Leeds
Partially addresses the question by examining the impact of school closures on foundation skills in reception children.
Despite improvements in school enrolment over the past 20 years, 781 million adults worldwide are still unable to read and write in any language (UNESCO 2015). In Niger, the subject of this study, less than 30% of the po...
Funded by: ESRC
Lead research organisation: Tufts University
Does not directly address the question of reducing persistent and severe absence in schools.