Saturday, 9 July 2011
Five schools 'send more to Oxbridge than 2,000 others'
The BBC Today programme's revelation that just five schools 'send more to Oxbridge than 2,000 others' isn't really a great surprise to me.
Having been lucky enough to have studied at Oxford, it is easy to see that independent school pupils dominate the student body. They also dominate the applicants.
I went to an independent school and apart from anything else, their desperate desire to get students into Oxbridge sets them apart. Parents want and need to see high Oxbridge entrance statistics.
Teachers who have been to Oxbridge are recruited. Admissions tutors are invited to speak. Ex-pupils who have attended the coveted universities come back to give talks. Half the year group are encouraged to apply, given the law of averages that means every year some who are expected to get in don't, and vice versa. Those who don't get in often take gap years and re-apply, with the blessing (and financial backing) of their parents.
The kind of pupil who goes to an independent school (especially such academically high-flying ones as the BBC lists), usually has:
- already been selected on the basis of their academic ability and then usually setted on ability throughout their education
- been praised and rewarded for their academic ability, through scholarships and a culture of success
- been raised by parents who place a high value on academic success and intellectual development
None of this should be exclusive to independent schools, but unfortunately a lot of it often seems to be.
Top universities have a responsibility to take the brightest and the best; those who will thrive best in their hallowed halls.
The class barrier and the money barrier are often labelled as the most important factors to achieving the most prestigious higher education, but actually none of the points I have listed are costly.
We need to work towards making these factors more accessible to all students long before we start worrying about what university they'll end up at.
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