Resourcing schools to address educational disadvantage

Posted on Monday, 19 August 2024
Main Image
education
Page Content
Text

The OECD Review of Resourcing Schools to Address Educational Disadvantage in Ireland has been published.  The review examines resource allocation to tackle educational disadvantage at school level and makes a series of recommendations to improve support provided to students at risk of educational disadvantage in both DEIS and non-DEIS schools in the education system.  The review notes that Ireland has an education system that consistently outperforms many other OECD countries and exhibits relative socio-economic fairness.  However, the review highlights that despite continued improvements over the past decade, important differences in outcomes persist between DEIS and non-DEIS schools and for children and young people from lower socio-economic backgrounds, and Travellers and Roma.

Text

OECD Review of Resourcing Schools to Address Educational Disadvantage in Ireland - main findings

Ireland demonstrates strong performance in reading, mathematics and science, and equity outcomes internationally across primary and post-primary levels. Moreover, the socio-economic gap in educational attainment is narrower than on average across OECD countries. The education system outperforms many other countries and exhibits above-average socio-economic fairness and equity.

However, despite these accomplishments, differences in outcomes persist for students from disadvantaged backgrounds, and Traveller and Roma students. Similar to other countries, gender gaps are also visible, particularly at the post-primary level. Despite improvements over the last decade, gaps between DEIS and non-DEIS schools persist.  The review also finds that the ‘right to costless basic education’ needs further review.

Teacher shortages particularly affect students in disadvantaged schools and areas. The shortage of teaching staff remained significantly more pronounced in disadvantaged schools, a difference that was among the largest observed in OECD countries.  Staff shortages within Ireland’s schools are compounded by those of relevant external support services (e.g. NEPS and Tusla staff) on which schools rely to support their most disadvantaged students in particular.

Text

Recommendations

Governance of policies to address educational disadvantage

  • Strengthen the coordination and integration of services across departments to better support students at risk of educational disadvantage.
  • Promote further the sharing of good practices in the education system and across schools in the area of educational disadvantage.

Resourcing schools to address educational disadvantage

  • Further strengthen access to free education.
  • Continue refining and validating the indicator(s) of social disadvantage underpinning the targeting of DEIS resources.
  • Examine scenarios to attenuate the adverse effects of key thresholds in the DEIS classification algorithm.
  • Extend partial additional support to all students defined as disadvantaged.
  • Prepare the periodic updating of the indicators of social disadvantage to develop a more dynamic resource allocation model.

Capacity building for schools to address educational disadvantage

  • Address staff shortages through targeted efforts to attract and retain diverse professionals for a career in disadvantaged schools.
  • Embed teachers’ continuing professional learning within a professional improvement cycle and remove barriers to participation.
  • Focus capacity-building efforts on priority areas both in and around DEIS schools.

School-level interventions to address educational disadvantage

  • Strengthen equity in provision of additional resources across schools.
  • Strengthen the coordination of educational services with the health and therapy service provision to minimise the burden on schools and families in meeting students’ needs.
  • Review additional costs of education to families to improve the accessibility of provisions.
  • Promote promising models and examples of engagement and collaboration with parents and families.

Monitoring and evaluation to address educational disadvantage

  • Promote research that could provide more information on the causal effects of the DEIS programme.
  • Strengthen the use of data at the school level.
×
This website uses cookies
This website uses cookies to improve user experience. By using our website you consent to all cookies in accordance with our Cookie Policy. Read more
Save & Close
Accept all
Decline all
Show details Hide details
Cookie declaration
About cookies
Strictly necessary
Performance
Targeting
Strictly necessary cookies allow core website functionality such as user login and account management. The website cannot be used properly without strictly necessary cookies.
Cookie report
Name Domain Expiration Description
CookieScriptConsent www.socialjustice.ie 1 month This cookie is used by Cookie-Script.com service to remember visitor cookie consent preferences. It is necessary for Cookie-Script.com cookie banner to work properly.
AWSELBCORS www.podbean.com 5 minutes The cookies AWSELB and AWSELBCORS are functionally the same cookies. The latter has an explicit SameSite attribute set because of changes made from Chrome 80 and upwards. 
__cf_bm .podbean.com 30 minutes This cookie is used to distinguish between humans and bots. This is beneficial for the website, in order to make valid reports on the use of their website.
Performance cookies are used to see how visitors use the website, eg. analytics cookies. Those cookies cannot be used to directly identify a certain visitor.
Cookie report
Name Domain Expiration Description
_ga .socialjustice.ie 2 years This cookie name is associated with Google Universal Analytics - which is a significant update to Google's more commonly used analytics service. This cookie is used to distinguish unique users by assigning a randomly generated number as a client identifier. It is included in each page request in a site and used to calculate visitor, session and campaign data for the sites analytics reports.
_gid .socialjustice.ie 1 day This cookie is set by Google Analytics. It stores and update a unique value for each page visited and is used to count and track pageviews.
Targeting cookies are used to identify visitors between different websites, eg. content partners, banner networks. Those cookies may be used by companies to build a profile of visitor interests or show relevant ads on other websites.
Cookie report
Name Domain Expiration Description
_gat_gtag_UA_30714684_1 .socialjustice.ie 1 minute This cookie is part of Google Analytics and is used to limit requests (throttle request rate).
YSC .youtube.com Session This cookie is set by YouTube to track views of embedded videos.
VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE .youtube.com 6 months This cookie is set by Youtube to keep track of user preferences for Youtube videos embedded in sites;it can also determine whether the website visitor is using the new or old version of the Youtube interface.
Cookies are small text files that are placed on your computer by websites that you visit. Websites use cookies to help users navigate efficiently and perform certain functions. Cookies that are required for the website to operate properly are allowed to be set without your permission. All other cookies need to be approved before they can be set in the browser. You can change your consent to cookie usage at any time on our Privacy Policy page.
Cookies consent ID:
Cookie report created by Cookie-Script