The adoption of setting in the primary school (pupils ability grouped across classes for particular subjects) emerged during the 1990s as a means to raise standards. Recent research based on 8875 children in the Millennium Cohort Study showed that 25.8% of children in Year 2 were set for literacy and mathematics and a further 11.2% of children were set for mathematics or literacy alone. Logistic regression analysis showed that the best predictors of being in the top set for literacy or mathematics were whether the child was born in the Autumn or Winter and cognitive ability scores. Boys were significantly more likely than girls to be in the bottom literacy set. Family circumstances held less importance for setting placement compared with th...
Grouping students by ‘ability’ is a topic of long-standing contention in English education policy, r...
The adoption of streaming in the primary school (where children are placed in a class on the basis o...
Background There is a lack of studies on the role of primary school attainment grouping on children’...
The adoption of setting in the primary school (pupils ability grouped across classes for particular ...
As a way to raise attainment, schools are encouraged to form ability groups across classes for parti...
Drawing upon data gathered from 9301 Year 7 students (12–13 years old) from 46 secondary schools in ...
In 1997, the DfEE suggested that schools should consider ‘setting’ pupils by ability as it was belie...
The value of ability grouping is often debated despite being adopted in primary and secondary school...
Advocates of grouping pupils by measured ability for instructional purposes claim that ability-homog...
Background: Grouping students into classes by ability on a subject-by-subject basis, also known as s...
Background: Grouping students into classes by ability on a subject-by-subject basis, also known as s...
Ability-grouping has been studied extensively in relation to children's academic, but not emotional ...
Drawing upon data gathered from 9301 Year 7 students (12–13 years old) from 46 secondary schools in ...
Despite extensive research on attainment grouping, the impact of attainment grouping on pupil attain...
There has been little research exploring pupils' satisfaction with their ability group placement. Th...
Grouping students by ‘ability’ is a topic of long-standing contention in English education policy, r...
The adoption of streaming in the primary school (where children are placed in a class on the basis o...
Background There is a lack of studies on the role of primary school attainment grouping on children’...
The adoption of setting in the primary school (pupils ability grouped across classes for particular ...
As a way to raise attainment, schools are encouraged to form ability groups across classes for parti...
Drawing upon data gathered from 9301 Year 7 students (12–13 years old) from 46 secondary schools in ...
In 1997, the DfEE suggested that schools should consider ‘setting’ pupils by ability as it was belie...
The value of ability grouping is often debated despite being adopted in primary and secondary school...
Advocates of grouping pupils by measured ability for instructional purposes claim that ability-homog...
Background: Grouping students into classes by ability on a subject-by-subject basis, also known as s...
Background: Grouping students into classes by ability on a subject-by-subject basis, also known as s...
Ability-grouping has been studied extensively in relation to children's academic, but not emotional ...
Drawing upon data gathered from 9301 Year 7 students (12–13 years old) from 46 secondary schools in ...
Despite extensive research on attainment grouping, the impact of attainment grouping on pupil attain...
There has been little research exploring pupils' satisfaction with their ability group placement. Th...
Grouping students by ‘ability’ is a topic of long-standing contention in English education policy, r...
The adoption of streaming in the primary school (where children are placed in a class on the basis o...
Background There is a lack of studies on the role of primary school attainment grouping on children’...