Poor kids are falling behind their rich peers before they have even left primary school as a result of a “class ceiling,” education campaigners said yesterday.
A report released today from the Fair Education Alliance shows that children from poorer areas are twice as likely to leave primary school without basic literacy and numeracy skills.
Pupils who are still trailing behind the toffs at 16 face being locked out of further education and trapped in a “cycle of poverty.”
With 170,000 children living in poverty in north-east England and teachers leaving in droves over 20 per cent real-terms pay cuts since 2010, all while private companies siphon off billions, it is time to unite and fight for education, writes MATT WRACK
NICOLA SARAH HAWKINS explains how an under-regulated introduction of AI into education is already exacerbating inequalities


