Article

Educational equity in England: the shortcomings of the UK Government’s COVID-19 response

Details

Citation

Kippin S (2023) Educational equity in England: the shortcomings of the UK Government’s COVID-19 response. Routledge Open Research, 2, p. 24. https://doi.org/10.12688/routledgeopenres.17904.1

Abstract
The UK Government sought to respond to lockdowns and lost learning during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in multiple ways, including replacing cancelled examinations and compensating for lost learning through a National Tutoring Programme. In the case of the former, the system failed to realise the demands of equity by privileging wealthier students and beating a path back to a flawed ‘normality.’ In the case of the latter, while the idea of providing targeted, high quality small group and one on one tutoring to the most in-need students was well-conceived, implementation was a failure - particularly following its contracting out to a large outsourcing company. These two cases demonstrate that English education policy is adherent to a neoliberal conception of education equity, and that attempts to address inequalities are constrained, backfire, or both.

Journal
Routledge Open Research: Volume 2

StatusPublished
Publication date online28/07/2023
Date accepted by journal16/07/2023
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35373
PublisherF1000 Research Ltd
ISSN2755-1245
eISSN2755-1245

People (1)

Dr Sean Kippin

Dr Sean Kippin

Senior Lecturer, Politics

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