T: 01822 851370 E: [email protected]
Higher education opportunities are being increasingly restricted for the poorest young people from rural and coastal communities. The Coast and Country: Access to higher education cold spots in England shows that pupils from free school meal (FSM) backgrounds in rural areas are less likely to go on to higher education than their urban peers, while those from coastal communities are less likely to progress to university than young people living inland.
Drawing on data released by the Department for Education, the report produced by the Ruskin Institute for Social Equity (RISE) also shows that:
The report calls on the government to set regional targets for progression to higher education for those from FSM backgrounds as part of its devolution plans and to support new, collaborative initiatives to widen access to higher education focused on rural and coastal communities.
RISE produces policy-relevant research related to inequality in the UK with a particular focus on place-based inequality, education and skills, work/labour market and the role of business. It is based at Ruskin College, Oxford.
The Head of RISE and the lead author of the report, Professor Graeme Atherton, states:
"The aspirations of individuals and communities who live on the coast or in rural areas to progress are being held back. This will make the government’s missions on opportunity and growth hard to achieve, and a new focus on widening access to higher education is required".