Schools: Admissions

(asked on 18th July 2019) - View Source

Question to the Department for Education:

To ask the Secretary of State for Education, what recent steps he has taken to widen access to the highest performing schools in England and Wales.


Answered by
Nick Gibb Portrait
Nick Gibb
This question was answered on 23rd July 2019

86% of schools in England are good or outstanding.

The Department has committed £7 billion to create new school places between 2015 and 2021, the vast majority of which are being created in the best existing schools or through good new schools. The Department is on track to create 1 million places this decade, the largest increase in school capacity in at least two generations.

Of the mainstream free schools approved between 2014 and 2017, 86% have been in areas where there was a need for more school places. 84% of free schools with inspection reports published by the end of May are rated good or outstanding.

98% of grammar schools are also good or outstanding and the Department wants more disadvantaged pupils to be able to access a place at them. That is why it has made £100 million available through the Selective Schools Expansion Fund to create additional places, where needed, in selective schools that commit to a plan to improve access for disadvantaged children. In 2018 the Department announced 16 selective schools to be funded to expand, and it launched a second bidding round in 2019.

Education is a devolved matter and it is for the Welsh national assembly to decide on education in Wales.

Reticulating Splines