Poverty is known to deleteriously affect children’s experience of, and success in, education. One facet of this relationship is the financial costs associated with full participation in education in what has become known as the ‘cost of the school day’. This paper draws on a small-scale longitudinal qualitative study of families living in poverty, drawn from a wider study called the ‘Early Warning System’, carried out in collaboration with the Child Poverty Action Group Scotland. The paper explores the experiences of parents in out-of-work and in-work poverty, and cycling between the two, in relation to school costs for their children and the effects this has on their wider financial situation. The findings show that families experiencing i...
This paper derives from a pilot study. The study explored how family’s forms of social capital owned...
This paper assesses the extent to which opportunities exist for an extension of the entitlement to f...
Background: Existing evidence suggests a relationship between family social contexts, family relatio...
Poverty is known to deleteriously affect children’s experience of, and success in, education. One fa...
This study examined the potential influence of policies and practices on the ability of children fro...
This study examined the potential influence of policies and practices on the ability of children fro...
This briefing provides an overview of the research evidence on the impact of poverty on children and...
Forty years ago it was easy to believe that child poverty had disappeared from modern Britain. It be...
School policy and practices are firmly rooted in the orthodoxy of the school improvement movement (S...
Background: Families with young children, and lone parent families in particular, are at greater ris...
This report explores how disadvantage affects children’s experience of primary school education. Imp...
This briefing paper uses responses from parents and children in the birth cohort study Growing Up in...
This briefing paper uses responses from parents and children in the birth cohort study Growing Up in...
Although there are no attendance or registration fees in the UK for publicly funded school education...
First paragraph: Improve the school results of children from poor backgrounds and they will escape p...
This paper derives from a pilot study. The study explored how family’s forms of social capital owned...
This paper assesses the extent to which opportunities exist for an extension of the entitlement to f...
Background: Existing evidence suggests a relationship between family social contexts, family relatio...
Poverty is known to deleteriously affect children’s experience of, and success in, education. One fa...
This study examined the potential influence of policies and practices on the ability of children fro...
This study examined the potential influence of policies and practices on the ability of children fro...
This briefing provides an overview of the research evidence on the impact of poverty on children and...
Forty years ago it was easy to believe that child poverty had disappeared from modern Britain. It be...
School policy and practices are firmly rooted in the orthodoxy of the school improvement movement (S...
Background: Families with young children, and lone parent families in particular, are at greater ris...
This report explores how disadvantage affects children’s experience of primary school education. Imp...
This briefing paper uses responses from parents and children in the birth cohort study Growing Up in...
This briefing paper uses responses from parents and children in the birth cohort study Growing Up in...
Although there are no attendance or registration fees in the UK for publicly funded school education...
First paragraph: Improve the school results of children from poor backgrounds and they will escape p...
This paper derives from a pilot study. The study explored how family’s forms of social capital owned...
This paper assesses the extent to which opportunities exist for an extension of the entitlement to f...
Background: Existing evidence suggests a relationship between family social contexts, family relatio...