1 / 19

Child Poverty

Child Poverty. Child Poverty and Educational Inequalities SQA Seminar 19 February 2009 John Dickie Head of CPAG in Scotland jdickie@cpagscotland.org.uk www.cpag.org.uk/scotland. CPAG in Scotland. What do we do? Overall aim to end child poverty raise awareness, campaign, lobby

natara
Download Presentation

Child Poverty

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Child Poverty Child Poverty and Educational Inequalities SQA Seminar 19 February 2009 John Dickie Head of CPAG in Scotland jdickie@cpagscotland.org.uk www.cpag.org.uk/scotland

  2. CPAG in Scotland What do we do? • Overall aim to end child poverty • raise awareness, campaign, lobby • work to ensure families receive the financial supports they are entitled to advice, training, information to frontline workers includes benefits for students project

  3. Child Poverty • Context – nature of the problem – what are we talking about? • Response to date – Scottish and UK government • Relationship with educational inequalities • What needs to happen and who needs to do it? • Role of SQA in reducing inequalities?

  4. The problem • 250 000 children living in poverty (1in4)(ahc) • (across UK 1 in 3, 3.9 million children) • twice 1979 rate • over twice rate of many other European countries • children at greater risk than population as a whole • public scepticism …tendency to blame individuals • structural problem of inequality, discrimination, unfair distribution of income • relative poverty measure

  5. Our place in Europe

  6. Impact of Child Poverty • By age 3, children in poverty 9 months behind in ‘school readiness’ • birth-weight – children born in the poorest fifth of areas average weigh 200g less than richest fifth • cost to society – estimate at £1.5 - £1.75 billion (Scotland), also loss of social cohesion/wellbeing. • Impact uneven – lone parenthood, disability, family size, worklessness, ethnicity

  7. The response • Targets to reduce child poverty by one quarter by 2004-05...by half by 2010 • …and eradicate it by 2020 • “Our historic aim, that ours is the first generation to end child poverty forever …It’s a 20-year mission, but I believe it can be done” Tony Blair, March 1999 • “We have made clear our commitment…to doing all within the powers available to us to help achieve the milestone to halve child poverty by 2010…and eradicating child poverty by 2020” Scottish Government, January 2008

  8. The response Related Scottish Government targets (in National Performance Framework) • Reduce income inequality – the Solidarity Golden Rule (one of six top level Purpose Targets) • Decrease the proportion of individuals living in poverty (Indicator 10)

  9. Current Policy and Impact • Key Policy measures to improve incomes: • Investment in family incomes (tax credits, child benefit) and in Scotland take up and advice and information • Increasing parental employment (W2W, Working for Families, improved rights at work) • Improving earnings from employment (NMW, skills)

  10. How well are we doing? • Policy works: first target to reduce child poverty by a quarter by 2004-05 met in Scotland (though not in UK) • Subject on political agenda across political parties • but child poverty in UK increased by 200,000 children in 2005-07, and standstill in Scotland • Not on track to meet the target for 2010 • Consultation on UK Child Poverty Bill

  11. UK Child Poverty trends

  12. Key Issues • Welfare reform - Conditionality • Rights and responsibilities –is balance right ?? • Conditions and sanctions – risk to children • Availability of good quality jobs • Low pay, discrimination, insecurity, lack of progression, rising unemployment • Half of children in poverty living in working families • Lone parent employment rate target of 70% would already be met if sustained jobs at same rate as other • Gaps in provision – childcare

  13. Key Issues 2 • Benefit/TC ‘safety net’ inadequate • and families not getting what they are entitled to • Make Child Benefit Count • Scottish Government/COSLA Framework for tackling poverty (Achieving our Potential) • welcome language and ambition, but are mechanisms strong enough to ensure resources have desired impact on ground? • Barriers to education

  14. Impact of Povertyon Education • Among lowest attaining 20% of pupils twice proportion of pupils registered for FSM. Attainment gap widening. • Highest proportion of the lowest attaining pupils live in most deprived areas. • By age 3, children in poverty 9 mths behind in ‘school readiness’.

  15. Impact of Povertyon Education • At each stage of schooling poverty gap grows. • Worse prospects as enter secondary school. • Big jump in gap in early secondary • Worse results at age 16. • Twice as likely to leave school with no qualifications. • Social gap in university entrance. • Poorer children find school more alienating and oppressive, feel lack of control over learning, disaffected • Fewer out-of-school learning opportunities

  16. The costs of school: reinforcing disadvantage • Prohibitive costs exclude children– from school trips, from home access to computers/internet, from creative and cultural opportunities. • Lack of consistency or guidance on charging policy. • Cost of healthy school meals: undermines nutrition. • Cost of school clothing: variation across Scotland in school clothing grants.

  17. Chicken and egg • Education can’t in itself end child poverty – need to recognise limits of education policy. • As long as families don’t have enough money to bring up children attainment gaps will prevail, undermining the next generation, and their children’s, chances of living lives free of poverty. • In seeking to address educational inequalities need to look at range of factors that impact on children. • Yet education policy can, and must, play a role in reducing the inequalities in the life chances of our children.

  18. What needs to happen? • Address inadequate family incomes • Tackle low pay and inadequate benefit/tax credit safety net • Reduce the costs of participation • Build on free school meals pilot and extension • Identify and promote good practice in minimising impact of charges for school related activity • Minimise impact of school uniform costs • Put children’s well-being at forefront of childcare and educational strategy, irrespective of parental work status. • Role of SQA? • See http://www.cpag.org.uk/2skint4school/

  19. Next steps • Child poverty and underachievement not inevitable. • With the right action all children can participate and benefit fully from educational opportunities • Ending child poverty needs to be at heart of education agenda • Sign up to 2 skint 4 school www.cpag.org.uk/2skint4school • Link your website or blog to www.cpag.org.uk/2skint4school/ • Let us know your views- Help our research and inform the campaign's main report and recommendations • Also see: http://www.jrf.org.uk/work/workarea/education-and-poverty

More Related