Sats results: Standards slip in Year 6 testson July 5, 2022 at 12:51 pm

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

59% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths, down from 65% before Covid.

Children studyingImage source, Getty Images

Overall standards in reading, writing and maths have slipped among Year 6 pupils in England since the pandemic, according to Sats results.

They show 59% of pupils met the expected level in these combined areas this year, down from 65% in 2019.

The national curriculum tests were cancelled in 2020 and 2021.

The government says the Sats results were “expected due to the impact of the pandemic” and that there is “more work to do” to help pupils catch up.

By 2030, it wants 90% of children leaving primary school to reach the expected standards in reading, writing and maths.

Unions have called for further investment in schools and teaching staff in order to achieve that target.

The pupils who took Sats this summer – mostly 11-year-olds – were part-way through Year 4 when schools first closed to most children in March 2020.

Further school closures followed while they were in Year 5, and many pupils also experienced disruption due to Covid at the beginning of Year 6.

Results from individual subjects suggest that reading levels increased slightly – with 74% of pupils meeting the expected standard, up from 73% in 2019.

But the proportion of pupils reaching the expected level has fallen in all other subjects since 2019:

  • 71% in maths, down from 79%
  • 69% in writing, down from 78%
  • 72% in grammar, punctuation and spelling, down from 78%
  • 79% in science, down from 83%

Minister for School Standards, Robin Walker, said of this year’s results: “While this is disappointing, it was expected due to the impact of the pandemic.

“The government recognises, and values, the work that teachers up and down the country are putting into education recovery, but also understands that there is more work to do.”

He added that £5bn has been allocated to help pupils catch up, and that children falling behind in English and maths would “receive the right evidence-based targeted support to get them back on track”.

The government’s recovery fund falls far short of what education unions and the former catch-up tsar, Sir Kevan Collins, said was required – around £15bn.

Cash to arrange catch-up tutoring will go directly to schools in England in the coming academic year, after the government axed its contract with tutoring supplier Randstad.

‘Emotional recovery’

The amount of learning disrupted because of Covid varies significantly across England, and the poorest pupils have fallen further behind than the better-off, according to a report for the government by the Education Policy Institute and Renaissance.

Paul Whiteman, general secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers, expressed caution about this year’s Sats data because “some families and school communities [were] hit far harder than others” by the pandemic.

“It’s important to remember that the support schools have put in place has not only been focused on academic progress, but also on social and emotional recovery too,” he said.

Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said the fall in maths and writing standards reflected “the huge importance of direct classroom teaching in these subjects – which has, of course, been heavily disrupted”.

He said the government’s 2030 targets would “require substantial investment in schools and the teaching workforce”.

He added that it was “hard to see how this can possibly be achieved” under current plans.

Around the BBC - Sounds
Around the BBC footer - Sounds
- Advertisement -

Discover

Sponsor

Latest

GB win first world four-man bobsleigh medal since 1939on February 5, 2023 at 5:52 pm

Brad Hall, Taylor Lawrence, Greg Cackett and Arran Gulliver finish joint second to claim Britain's first four-man medal at the World Championships since 1939.Brad...

Uefa issues Champions League final apology to Liverpool and Real Madrid fanson June 3, 2022 at 5:44 pm

Uefa apologises to Liverpool and Real Madrid fans "who had to experience or witness frightening and distressing events" at last Saturday's Champions League final.Liverpool...

Alexei Navalny: Russian opposition leader ‘removed from penal colony’on December 11, 2023 at 4:32 pm

Alexei Navalny's associates say they don't know where he is, after six days of uncertainty.Image source, EPABy Robert GreenallBBC NewsImprisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei...

Emma Raducanu retires injured at Nottingham Openon June 7, 2022 at 1:07 pm

Watch the moment Emma Raducanu retires injured from her first-round match against Viktorija Golubic at the Nottingham Open.

Week in pictures: 10-16 February 2024on February 17, 2024 at 2:25 am

A selection of striking images from around the world, taken over the past seven days.A selection of striking images from around the world, taken...