Education

Major Report Exposes 'White Working-Class Disadvantage Gap' in Education

Published June 29, 2026
A major inquiry has identified a persistent "white working-class disadvantage gap" within the education system, finding that current structures fail to adequately serve children from this background. The report highlights that addressing these deep-rooted disparities will require sustained national effort and systemic reform over many years to ensure provision meets the needs of all communities. For Lead Members and local authorities, these findings raise critical questions about how schools and wider educational services can better support disadvantaged pupils. The inquiry underscores the importance of understanding intersectional disadvantages and ensuring that inclusion strategies explicitly address the attainment gaps affecting White working-class children, alongside other protected characteristics. The call for long-term national effort signals the scale of change required across education policy, from early years through to post-16 provision. Councillors will need to consider how local strategies—spanning attendance support, curriculum relevance, and family engagement—can contribute to closing this gap whilst maintaining focus on other vulnerable groups.

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