The London Picture. anewdirection.org.uk

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Transcription:

The London Picture anewdirection.org.uk

DISTRIBUTION OF PUPILS BY SCHOOL TYPE AND POPULATION GROWTH ESTIMATES Where young Londoners go to school and population change over the next ten years 16% of all pupils in England live in London 64% of all pupils in London live in Outer London 24% of all Independent school pupils in England go to school in London ENFIELD HARINGEY WALTHAM FOREST BARNET HARROW BRENT CAMDEN ISLINGTON HACKNEY REDBRIDGE HILLINGDON EALING HAMMERSMITH & FULHAM WESTMINSTER CITY OF TOWER HAMLETS HAVERING KENSINGTON & CHELSEA SOUTHWARK HOUNSLOW WANDSWORTH GREENWICH BEXLEY RICHMOND UPON LAMBETH LEWISHAM KINGSTON UPON MERTON = 232 pupils = 61,348 pupils BROMLEY = 4% = 34% SUTTON CROYDON REFERENCES: 1. http://www.education.gov.uk/rsgateway/db/sfr/s001071/index.shtml 2. Schools, Pupils and their Characteristics produced by the Department for Education were released on 21st June 2012 according to the arrangements approved by the UK Statistics Authority 3. http://data.london.gov.uk/datastore/package/gla-demographic-projections No. of pupils in state funded primary No. of pupils in state funded secondary No. of secondary pupils in Academies No. of pupils in Independent Total pupils in all schools % increase in population of 5-12 year olds by 2020

DISTRIBUTION OF PUPILS BY SCHOOL TYPE AND POPULATION GROWTH ESTIMATES Where young Londoners go to school and population change over the next ten years - ACADEMIES ACADEMIES The Academy picture is changing rapidly. In September 2012 there were 2,309 academies across England ten times the 203 that were in existence when the coalition came to power in 14,720 BROMLEY & TOWER HAMLETS 90% of secondary students in Bromley are in Academies whereas only 4% in Tower Hamlets. 2010. i We can see from the data that some boroughs BARNET have embraced academies more than others but growth is likely to continue across London. 13,116 BROMLEY, BEXLEY, BARNET, SUTTON & HILLINGDON Currently have the highest number of secondary school pupils in Academies. HILLINGDON 17,192 BEXLEY 14,049 20,166 = 232 pupils = 61,348 pupils SUTTON BROMLEY No. of pupils in state funded primary No. of pupils in state funded secondary No. of secondary pupils in Academies No. of pupils in Independent

DISTRIBUTION OF PUPILS BY SCHOOL TYPE AND POPULATION GROWTH ESTIMATES Where young Londoners go to school and population change over the next ten years - INDEPENDENTS INDEPENDENTS London has the highest proportion of private or independent schools in the country. In some boroughs a very large proportion of young people are educated privately. Our NFER survey showed that private schools tend to sit outside of local structures for encouraging cultural education. ii CAMDEN 8,678 KENSINGTON & CHELSEA, WANDSWORTH, RICHMOND, CAMDEN, WESTMINSTER & CROYDON have the highest number of pupils attending Independent schools. RICHMOND UPON 9,571 12,880 KENSINGTON & CHELSEA 8,323 9,788 WESTMINSTER WANDSWORTH = 232 pupils = 61,348 pupils 7,215 CROYDON No. of pupils in state funded primary No. of pupils in state funded secondary No. of secondary pupils in Academies No. of pupils in Independent

DISTRIBUTION OF PUPILS BY SCHOOL TYPE AND POPULATION GROWTH ESTIMATES Where young Londoners go to school and population change over the next ten years - GROWTH GROWTH London s population is On average 47% of growing and getting London students in years younger some boroughs 12 and 13 study in a will see disproportionate different borough to the growth. one they live in - making school places planning According to London Councils the city will need 90,000 new schools places (primary and secondary) between 2012 and 2016. iii 24% BARNET REDBRIDGE 24% 34% 23% HAVERING even more complex. iv, GREENWICH, REDBRIDGE, BARNET & HAVERING. have the highest rate of population growth within the younger age group. 25% GREENWICH = 4% = 34% No. of pupils in state funded primary No. of pupils in state funded secondary No. of secondary pupils in Academies No. of pupils in Independent Total pupils in all schools % increase in population of 5-12 year olds by 2020

EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT ACROSS BOROUGHS Success at GCSE and progression of young Londoners from age 16 75% of London schools UNEMPLOYMENT London has high levels of are judged to be good or youth unemployment 1 outstanding by Ofsted in 4 young people aged compared to 69 % of between 16 and 24 is schools across England. viii unemployed. At 25% ENFIELD youth unemployment( is SKILLS NEEDS One in two jobs in London by 2020 will require at least degree level skills. 51% people in employment in London had NVQ4+ skills in 2010 compared to 37% of people in England. x HILLINGDON HARROW EALING BRENT HAMMERSMITH & FULHAM BARNET CAMDEN KENSINGTON & CHELSEA ISLINGTON WESTMINSTER HARINGEY HACKNEY CITY OF SOUTHWARK WALTHAM FOREST TOWER HAMLETS REDBRIDGE HAVERING together with Yorkshire and Humberside) the highest in England (@September 2012). ix NEETS Top 5: Southwark Lambeth Haringey Barking & Dagenham Croydon Bottom 5: HOUNSLOW RICHMOND UPON WANDSWORTH LAMBETH LEWISHAM GREENWICH BEXLEY City of London Kingston Upon Thames Harrow Richmond Upon Thames KINGSTON UPON Barnet MERTON BROMLEY = 0.2% = 78.5% SUTTON CROYDON % of all subject GCSE entries (in maintained schools) in arts subjects % of students in 2008/09, who entered an A Level or equivalent qualification going to, or remaining in, an education destination in 2009/10 % Pupils at Key stage 4 achieving five+ grades A*-C at GCSE (or equiv) including maths and English REFERENCES: 1. http://lseo.org.uk/sites/default/files/downloads/localdata/indicators_london_borough_data_v4.2.xls 2. http://www.education.gov.uk/researchandstatistics/datasets/a00201306/dfe-gcse-and-equivalent-results-in-england-201011-revised 3. http://www.education.gov.uk/rsgateway/db/sta/t001076/osr13-2012.pdf 4. http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/what-we-do/our-priorities-2011-15/children-and-young-people/ % of 16-18 year olds who are NEET (not in training education or employment)

EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT ACROSS BOROUGHS Success at GCSE and progression of young Londoners from age 16 ARTS GCSES AND s research into cultural engagement suggests Independent schools are more likely to enrol students in arts & had the highest number of young people going into apprenticeships aged 17. vi subjects at GCSE - with 46% of Independents surveyed reporting 81-100 of their pupils achieving an A-C grade at GCSE in an arts subject compared to 10.3 % of maintained secondary and 25% of academies. xi AVERAGE: Since 2004 London schools have out-performed the rest of GCSE ENTRIES IN ARTS SUBJECTS Top 5: City of London Islington Richmond Upon Thames Camden Barking & Dagenham the country for achievement of 5 good GCSEs at Key stage 4 62% in London compared to 58% the England average. v ii Bottom 5: Merton Waltham Forest Barnet Croydon Ealing SUTTON According to 2010 data Sutton had more young people going on to Oxford and Cambridge than any other borough in London. v = 0.2% = 78.5% SUTTON % of all subject GCSE entries (in maintained schools) in arts subjects % of students in 2008/09, who entered an A Level or equivalent qualification going to, or remaining in, an education destination in 2009/10 % Pupils at Key stage 4 achieving five+ grades A*-C at GCSE (or equiv) including maths and English % of 16-18 year olds who are NEET (not in training education or employment)

DISTRIBUTION OF CULTURAL ORGANISATIONS, AUDIENCES AND ARTSMARK What s going on where, who s taking-part in the arts and density of schools engaged in Artsmark KENSINGTON & CHELSEA, RICHMOND, CITY OF, CAMDEN & WANDSWORTH are the top five local authorities in England for adult engagement in the arts. THE TOP BOROUGHS FOR NO OF ACE / MUSEUMS are Westminster, Camden, Tower Hamlets, Islington and Southwark. CAMDEN, & HOUNSLOW are the lowest three boroughs for adult engagement in the arts. KENSINGTON & CHELSEA 62% 66% CITY OF 64% HOUNSLOW 64% 60% RICHMOND UPON WANDSWORTH = 32% = 66% = 2 = 118 number of organisations/premises % Adults taking part in the arts Number of Arts Council funded organisations and listed museums Number of premises licensed for entertainment

DISTRIBUTION OF CULTURAL ORGANISATIONS, AUDIENCES AND ARTSMARK What s going on where, who s taking-part in the arts and density of schools engaged in Artsmark London has the largest cultural and creative CENTRAL The creative and cultural sector in England sectors tend to be probably in Europe. There localised and particularly are around 400 museums in London and 300 ENFIELD dense within central London. Cultural provision libraries. London is a super cluster in terms of HARINGEY in Outer London can be as low as in other areas of employment in the cultural creative sectors meaning BARNET WALTHAM FOREST the country. it has some of the highest density of employment in this area in the world. HARROW BRENT CAMDEN ISLINGTON HACKNEY REDBRIDGE HILLINGDON EALING HAMMERSMITH & FULHAM CITY OF TOWER HAMLETS HAVERING KENSINGTON & CHELSEA WESTMINSTER SOUTHWARK HOUNSLOW WANDSWORTH GREENWICH BEXLEY RICHMOND UPON LAMBETH LEWISHAM KINGSTON UPON MERTON BROMLEY = 32% = 66% SUTTON CROYDON = 2 = 118 number of organisations/premises REFERENCES: 1. http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/what-we-do/research-and-data/arts-audiences/active-people-survey/ 2. http://www.artsaward.org.uk/site/?id=2251 3. http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/funding/apply-for-funding/national-portfolio-organisations-map/, http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/what-we-do/our-priorities-2011-15/children-and-young-people/ 4. http://www.culture.gov.uk/publications/7456.aspx % Adults taking part in the arts Number of Arts Council funded organisations and listed museums Number of premises licensed for entertainment (when no dot appears, no data is available)

DISTRIBUTION OF CULTURAL ORGANISATIONS, AUDIENCES AND ARTSMARK What s going on where, who s taking-part in the arts and density of schools engaged in Artsmark YOUTH ENGAGEMENT An Arts council Wales MUSIC QUALIFICATIONS 64,000 pupils are taking study of young people music qualifications in engagement in the arts state secondary schools in suggested that those in wealthy areas sited ENFIELD 2011-2012 but nearly 40% of those students parents time as the most pressing barrier to HARINGEY come from just 10% of London s schools. engagement and in the poorest area it was BARNET WALTHAM FOREST 200,000 London children are learning musical affordability. xii HARROW BRENT CAMDEN ISLINGTON HACKNEY REDBRIDGE instruments. xiii HILLINGDON EALING HAMMERSMITH & FULHAM CITY OF TOWER HAMLETS HAVERING ENGLAND has 14% of schools with Artsmark. KENSINGTON & CHELSEA WESTMINSTER SOUTHWARK HOUNSLOW WANDSWORTH GREENWICH BEXLEY RICHMOND UPON LEWISHAM KINGSTON UPON MERTON LAMBETH BROMLEY = 2 = 29 number of schools SUTTON CROYDON = 2% = 29% Number of schools with Artsmark % of schools with Artsmark from total schools in borough

ECONOMIC AND CULTURAL DIVERSITY IN Where different communities are concentrated across London SOCIAL FACTORS AND ATTAINMENT ETHNICITY AND ATTAINMENT More Chinese pupils in Some groups of pupils are London achieve the doing less well than others national benchmark of 5 for example pupils GCSE grade A C eligible for free school meals are almost twice as likely to be permanently excluded than the norm white pupils, FSM pupils BARNET ENFIELD HARINGEY WALTHAM FOREST including English and Maths than any other ethnic group in England. xvii and SEN pupils are more likely to be absent from school regularly. xvi HARROW BRENT CAMDEN ISLINGTON HACKNEY REDBRIDGE HAVERING HILLINGDON EALING HAMMERSMITH & FULHAM WESTMINSTER CITY OF TOWER HAMLETS KENSINGTON & CHELSEA SOUTHWARK HOUNSLOW WANDSWORTH GREENWICH BEXLEY RICHMOND UPON LAMBETH LEWISHAM KINGSTON UPON MERTON BROMLEY = 7% = 76% SUTTON CROYDON % Pupils registered for free school meals % Children living in poverty REFERENCES: 1. http://www.education.gov.uk/researchandstatistics/statistics/statistics-by-topic/performance 2. www.cpag.org.uk 3. http://data.london.gov.uk/datastore/package/languages-spoken-pupils-borough-msoa % Pupils speaking a language other than English at home

ECONOMIC AND CULTURAL DIVERSITY IN Where different communities are concentrated across London POVERTY London has some of the highest levels of poverty in TEMPORARY ACCOMODATION 75% of all households living England and this is in temporary particularly the case for accommodation in England child poverty. live in London in Newham the number of household per 1,000 in temporary accommodation is 42 UK AVERAGE: 18% EALING More than half the compared to 1 in Merton. xiv boroughs in London have more than the England average for pupils registered for Free School Meals and some are more than double the rate of England. 18% EALING 18% 37% HOUSEHOLD INCOME AND ATTAINMENT London schools perform well for poorer students the attainment gap at GCSE for students on free schools meals is 19 percentage points (lower 18% than the non-fsm average) compared to 27% in the MERTON rest of the country. xv = 7% = 76% % Pupils registered for free school meals % Children living in poverty % Pupils speaking a language other than English at home

ECONOMIC AND CULTURAL DIVERSITY IN Where different communities are concentrated across London LANGUAGE It is thought that over 300 languages are spoken in London. The GLA data on languages spoken by pupils at home looked at over 100 languages. TOWER HAMLETS,, WESTMINSTER & BRENT more than 60% of pupils are speaking another language at home. THE TOP TEN LANGUAGES SPOKEN BRENT by pupils in London (according to a 2008) survey: 60% TOWER HAMLETS 70% Bengali Urdu Somali 68% 76% Panjabi Gujarati Arabic WESTMINSTER Turkish Tamil Yoruba French = 7% = 76% % Pupils registered for free school meals % Children living in poverty % Pupils speaking a language other than English at home

REFERENCES DISTRIBUTION OF PUPILS BY SCHOOL TYPE AND POPULATION GROWTH ESTIMATES 1. Schools, Pupils and their Characteristics produced by the Department for Education were released on 21st June 2012 according to the arrangements approved by the UK Statistics Authority 2. http://www.education.gov.uk/rsgateway/db/sfr/s001071/index.shtml 3. Population growth estimates: GLA Demographic Projections http://data.london.gov.uk/datastore/package/gla-demographic-projections i ii iii iv http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/2012/sep/26/academies-sponsors-list-map http://anewdirection.org.uk/blog/future-of-cultural-education-new-kinds-of-cultural-collaboration-for-new-kinds-of-schools http://www.london.gov.uk/strategy-policy/mayors-education-inquiry Final Report http://www.london.gov.uk/strategy-policy/mayors-education-inquiry Final Report EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT ACROSS BOROUGHS 1. Proportion of 16-18 year olds who are NEET (not in training education or employment) (%) (March 2011) DfE - NCCIS and Connexions http://lseo.org.uk/sites/default/files/downloads/localdata/indicators_london_borough_data_v4.2.xls 2. % Pupils at Key stage 4 achieving five+ grades A*-C at GCSE (or equiv) including maths and English 2010/2011. DFE SFR 02/2012 http://www.education.gov.uk/researchandstatistics/datasets/a00201306/dfe-gcse-and-equivalent-results-in-england-201011-revised 3. Destination data - DfE National pupil database 2010 http://www.education.gov.uk/rsgateway/db/sta/t001076/osr13-2012.pdf 4. % of all subject GCSE entries (in maintained schools) in arts subjects 2011 Arts Council England, Cultural education profile tool http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/what-we-do/our-priorities-2011-15/children-and-young-people/ v vi vii viii ix x xi http://www.education.gov.uk/rsgateway/db/sta/t001076/osr13-2012.pdf http://www.education.gov.uk/rsgateway/db/sta/t001076/osr13-2012.pdf http://www.london.gov.uk/strategy-policy/mayors-education-inquiry Final Report http://www.london.gov.uk/strategy-policy/mayors-education-inquiry Final Report http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/interactive/2011/nov/16/youth-unemployment-map http://www.london.gov.uk/strategy-policy/mayors-education-inquiry First Report http://anewdirection.org.uk/blog/future-of-cultural-education-new-kinds-of-cultural-collaboration-for-new-kinds-of-schools

REFERENCES CONTINUED DISTRIBUTION OF CULTURAL ORGANISATIONS, AUDIENCES AND ARTSMARK 1. Active People Taking Part data 2009 http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/what-we-do/research-and-data/arts-audiences/active-people-survey/ 2. Artsmark figures for local authorities are compiled by Trinity using Edubase data to determine % of schools http://www.artsaward.org.uk/site/?id=2251 3. ACE National Portfolio organisations data mapped http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/funding/apply-for-funding/national-portfolio-organisations-map/ Museums are listed as former MLA listed museums Arts Council England, Cultural education profile tool http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/what-we-do/our-priorities-2011-15/children-and-young-people/ 4. Number of premises licensed for entertainment includes theatres, studios, live music venues etc. DCMS October 2010. http://www.culture.gov.uk/publications/7456.aspx xii xiii ACW 2006 Participation in the arts by Young people in Wales www.artswales.org.uk/3152.file.dld http://www.london.gov.uk/strategy-policy/mayors-education-inquiry First Report ECONOMIC AND CULTURAL DIVERSITY IN 1. GCSE Equivalent attainment pupil characteristics 2011 http://www.education.gov.uk/researchandstatistics/statistics/statistics-by-topic/performance 2. Defined by children living in households defined as being 'Below Household Income' by Dpt Work and Pensions WWW.cpag.org.uk 3. Languages spoken by pupils by borough 2008 Schools census http://data.london.gov.uk/datastore/package/languages-spoken-pupils-borough-msoa xiv http://www.londonspovertyprofile.org.uk/downloads/povertyreport2011-web.pdf xv http://www.london.gov.uk/strategy-policy/mayors-education-inquiry Final Report xvi http://www.london.gov.uk/strategy-policy/mayors-education-inquiry First Report xvii http://www.london.gov.uk/strategy-policy/mayors-education-inquiry First Report