Socioeconomic inequalities in education achievement and student outcomes

Published: Jan. 17, 2017, 3:56 p.m.

b'Anna Vignoles, Professor of Education and Director of Research at the Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge and a trustee of the Nuffield Foundation, gives a talk for the Department of Education Public Seminar Series. Whilst much attention has been paid to the socio\\xadeconomic gap in higher education participation, far less research has investigated the extent to which graduate earnings vary by their socio\\xadeconomic background.\\nIn this research, we present results from an analysis that uses large scale administrative data from both the education and the tax systems to document the trajectories taken by different pupils through the school system into HE and beyond into the labour market. We then measure how the earnings of English graduates around 10 years into the labour market vary with the socioeconomic background of the graduate. Based on a simple measure of parental income, we see that graduates from higher income families (from the top fifth of the income distribution of those enrolled in university) have median earnings which are around 25% more than those from lower income families. This partly reflects the different subject and institution choices of students from different socio\\xadeconomic backgrounds. Once we control for institution attended and subject chosen, this premium falls to around 10%.\\nWe discuss the interpretation of these findings for policy on fair access to universities whose graduates tend to have higher earnings.'