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High-performing comprehensives take just half the rate of disadvantaged pupils as the average state school.

£45,700

How much more a house in the catchment area of a high-performing comprehensive costs.

80%

Four out of five parents think school admissions should be fairer.

Help us to create a fairer system

School admissions are complex and controversial. To help create a fairer system, we want to create concrete guidance that can help schools and local authorities implement admissions policies that work for families and schools across the country.

But to do this, we need your help. We’re asking schools and organisations to take part in our short consultation, which will inform our work the direction of our work over the next few months. We want to know about your experiences with admissions, including the barriers you’ve faced and what’s worked well for you in your community.

TAKE THE SURVEY

How do school admissions work?

Do parents and carers get to choose which school their child goes to?

How do schools decide which pupils to admit?

What is the school admissions code?

What can schools do?

What are the options for a fairer system?

The Trust is looking at a number of policies, with the potential to improve fairness in how schools decide which pupils to admit. These include, but are not limited to:

Ballots

Schools reserve a proportion of their places to be allocated by random draw. All applicants to the school, excluding those already accepted through the standard priorities, would be given a random number, regardless of any other priority status at the school. This would be used to rank applicants to fill up the remaining places in the school.

Priority for disadvantaged families

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Priority for disadvantaged families

Schools prioritise applicants based on their family income. It’s already legal for schools to prioritise pupils from poorer households. From 2014 the admissions code enabled schools to admit students on the basis of their eligibility for the pupil premium.

Banding tests

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Banding tests

The primary aim of banding tests in school admissions is to achieve a comprehensive intake in terms of academic ability. Typically, a school sets a test for all applicants and admits equal numbers of students from each ability band.This ensures a range of ability in the school, central to the ethos of the comprehensive schools’ movement.

Simplifying faith school admissions

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Simplifying faith school admissions

At the moment, schools are allowed to use complex and quite different criteria on applicants to judge religious observance. For example, schools can rank applicants according to their observed religiosity.

Working with the various faith communities to assess barriers to entry could help develop more straightforward criteria for parents.

Our school system is highly socially segregated. Schools with well-off intakes sit alongside those with high levels of disadvantage. And low- and moderate-income families are less likely to access the highest performing schools.

It’s clear that parents and teachers alike want to see a much fairer system, where schools better reflect their communities. This would have far-reaching benefits, from better levels of overall attainment to improved teacher recruitment and retention.

Sir Peter Lampl, founder and chairman, the Sutton Trust