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Students from low-income households

This refers to students whose household income before attending university (usually the income of the parents or guardians) falls below a certain amount.

Studies define low household income in different ways, including:

  • where the income is less than 60 per cent of the median net disposable equivalised UK household income at the time of the study
  • using a pre-defined amount. These can range from £16,000 to £50,000
  • dividing UK households into income quintiles, with the lowest income households defined as either quintile 1, or quintiles 1 and 2.

Many studies, including Department for Education data, use information on whether a pupil is eligible for free school meals as a proxy for income status.

Some studies use ‘currently eligible for free school meals’, while others use ‘eligible for free school meals at any point in the past six years’ (ever 6 FSM).

Other terms used in studies include: ‘low socio-economic status’ and ‘working-class’, although it should be noted that these also have separate meanings not linked to household income.

Key statistics

 Key Stage 4 GCSE attainment:

Department for Education, ‘Key stage 4 performance, Academic year 2022/23’ October 2023. 

Access to higher education:

Department for Education, ‘Widening Participation in Higher Education’ publication July 2023. 

Continuation – Progression:

Available data as of January 2024 from: The Education and Skills Funding Agency’s (ESFA’s) individualised learner record (ILR), The Student Return, collected by the Designated Data Body (DDB) and The Student Alternative (SA) record, collected by the Designated Data Body (DDB).

It is important to note that these are sector wide statistics. For provider-level data, please see the datasets listed below.

 

These students are likely to experience the following risks:

Risk 1 Risk 2 Risk 3 Risk 4 Risk 5 Risk 6 Risk 7 Risk 8 Risk 9 Risk 10 Risk 11 Risk 12

On a provider level:

UCAS provides information on free school meals eligibility at the age of 16 for applicants. This can be verified using DfE data. This can then be matched to Individualised Learner Records by a provider for internal database purposes.

The Student Loans Company provide information on household income level a year after a student starts on course. 

The Access and Participation data dashboard has information on the access, continuation, completion, attainment and progression rates of students by FSM eligibility.

The student outcomes data dashboard has information on the continuation, completion and progression rates of students by FSM eligibility.

The sector distribution of student outcomes and experience measures data dashboard has information on the continuation, completion and progression rates of students by FSM eligibility, as well as experience (via the National Student Survey).

The size and shape of provision data dashboard has information on the profile of entrants by FSM status.

The TEF data dashboard has information on the continuation, completion and progression rates of students by FSM eligibility, as well as experience (via NSS).

On a national level: 

The student characteristics data: Outcomes data dashboard has information on the profile, continuation, completion, attainment and progression rates of students by FSM eligibility. 

The National Student Survey data: student characteristics data has information on the experience of students by FSM eligibility. 

The Department for Education ‘Education Statistics service’ also has information on the percentage of students in receipt of FSM in each school.

Note: Definitions and the quality of each study vary.

Access HE (2021). ‘Best Laid Plans: London's 'Covid Cohort' and Progression to Higher Education’. (Accessed 12/01/2024)

Advance HE (2019) 2019 UK ‘Engagement Survey. Advance HE’. (Accessed 12/02/2024)

Anders, J., Henderson, M., Moulton V., & Sullivan, A. (2018) ‘The role of schools in explaining individuals’ subject choices at age 14’, Oxford Review of Education, 44:1, 75-93, DOI: 10.1080/03054985.2018.1409973

Anders, J., Macmillan, L., Sturgis, P. & Wyness, G. (2021). ‘Inequalities in young peoples’ educational experiences and wellbeing during the Covid-19 pandemic’ (CEPEO Working Paper No. 21-08). Centre for Education Policy and Equalising Opportunities, UCL.

Andrew, A., Cattan, S., Costa Dias, M., Farquharson, C., Kraftman, L., Krutikova, S., Phimister, A., and Sevilla, A. (2020c), ‘Learning during the Lockdown: Real-Time Data on Children’s Experiences during Home Learning’, Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), Briefing Note 288

Archer, A., Higton, J., Sibieta, L., and Tahir, I. (2021), ‘The Road Not Taken: The Drivers of Course Selection’, Social Mobility Commission

Baker, D. P., Akiba, M., LeTendre, G. K., & Wiseman, A. W. (2001). ‘Worldwide shadow education: Outside-school learning, institutional quality of schooling, and crossnational mathematics achievement’. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 23 (1), 1-17;

Benson-Egglenton, J. (2019) ‘The financial circumstances associated with high and low wellbeing in undergraduate students: a case study of an English Russell Group institution’. Journal of Further and Higher Education. 43 (7), 901–913. doi:10.1080/0309877X.2017.1421621.

Britt, S.L., Mendiola, M. R., Schink, G.H., Tibbetts, R.H. and Jones, S.H. (2016). ‘Financial Stress, Coping Strategy and Academic Achievement in College Students’. 

Britton, J., Dearden, L. & Waltmann, B. (2021) ‘The returns to undergraduate degrees by socio-economic group and ethnicity’. Institute for Fiscal Studies;

Burke, P.J., Bennett, A., Burgess, C., Gray, K. and Southgate, E. 2016. ‘Capability, Belonging and Equity in Higher Education: Developing inclusive approaches’. Newcastle, NSW: Centre of Excellence for Equity in Higher Education, The University of Newcastle

Callender, C. & Melis, G. (2022) ‘The privilege of choice: how prospective college students’ financial concerns influence their choice of higher education institution and subject of study in England’. The Journal of Higher Education. 93 (3), 477–501. doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/00221546.2021.199616

Campbell, S., Macmillan, L., Wyness, G., Bryson, A., Stokes, L., & Wilkinson, D. (2019) ‘Mismatch in higher education: prevalence, drivers and outcomes’

Cattan, S., Farquharson, C., Krutikova, S., Phimister, A., Salisbury, A., and Sevilla, A. (2021a), ‘Home Learning Experiences through the COVID-19 Pandemic’, Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), Report 195.

Cecilia A. Essau, Alejandro de la Torre-Luque (2021), ‘Adolescent psychopathological profiles and the outcome of the COVID-19 pandemic: Longitudinal findings from the UK Millennium Cohort Study, Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry’, Volume 110, 2021, 110330, ISSN 0278-5846, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pnpbp.2021.110330.

Chowdry, H., Crawford, C., Dearden, L., Goodman, A. and Vignoles, A. (2013), ‘Widening participation in higher education: analysis using linked administrative data’. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society), 176: 431-457. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-985X.2012.01043.x

Crawford, C. & Van der Erve, L. (2015) ‘Does Higher Education Level the Playing Field? Socio-Economic Differences in Graduate Earnings’. Education Sciences. 5 (4), 380– 412. doi: https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci5040380.

Crawford, C., Macmillan, L. & Vignoles, A. (2014) ‘Progress made by high-attaining children from disadvantaged backgrounds’. Social Mobility & Child Poverty Commission.

Cullinane, C., Yarde, J., Shao, X., Anders, J., De Gennaro, A., Holt-White, E., & Montacute, R. (2023). 'Wave 1 Initial Findings – Financial Inequalities and the Pandemic'. COVID Social Mobility & Opportunities study (COSMO) Briefing No. 6. London: UCL Centre for Education Policy & Equalising Opportunities & Sutton Trust. 

Department for Education (2018) ‘Outcomes for pupils eligible for free school meals and identified with special educational needs’. Ad-hoc statistics. (Accessed 12/01/2024)

Department for Education (2023) ‘HE providers’ policies and practices to support student mental health’ (publishing.service.gov.uk). (Accessed 12/12/2023)

Department for Education (2023) 'KS4 national characteristics data' from 'Key stage 4 performance', Permanent data table. (Accessed 12/12/2023)

Department for Education (2023) Statistics: GCSEs (key stage 4). (Accessed 01/11/2023)

Department of Health and Social Care (2012) Chief Medical Officer, ‘Our Children Deserve Better: Prevention Pays’. Annual Report of the Chief Medical Officer. 

Donnelly, M., & Gamsu, S. (2018) ‘Home and away: Social, ethnic and spatial inequalities in student mobility’. The Sutton Trust. (Accessed 12/01/2024)

Easterbrook, M. J., Harris, P. R., & Sherman, D. K. (2021). ‘Self-affirmation theory in educational contexts’. Journal of Social Issues, 77, 683–701. https://doi.org/10.1111/josi.12459;Nieuwenhuis

Elliot Major, L., Eyles, A., and Machin, S. (2020), ‘Generation COVID: Emerging Work and Education Inequalities’, Centre for Economic Performance (CEP), COVID-19 Analysis, Paper 011.

Farquharson, C. and Greaves, E. (2021). ‘Even high-achieving pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds miss out on some university opportunities – but mentoring programmes can help’. Institute for Fiscal Studies.

Farquharson, C., McNally, S. and Tahir, I. (2022), ‘Education inequalities’, IFS Deaton Review of Inequalities

Goodenow 1993 cited in Thomas 2012: Thomas, L., 2012. ‘Building student engagement and belonging in Higher Education at a time of change: final report from the What Works ? Student Retention & Success programme’

Henderson, M., Sullivan, A., Anders, J. & Moulton, V. (2018) ‘Social Class, Gender and Ethnic Differences in Subjects Taken at Age 14’. The Curriculum Journal. 29 (3), 298–318.

HEPI & Unipol (2023) ‘Student accommodation costs across 10 cities in the UK. Cost pressures and their consequences in Purpose-Built Student Accommodation’ (Accessed 11/01/2024)

HEPI (2023) ‘Student Academic Experience Survey 2023’. HEPI. (Accessed 12/12/2023)

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House of Commons Library (2023) ‘Impact of increases in the cost of living on further and higher education students’. (Accessed 10/12/2023)

House of Commons Library (2023) ‘Research briefing: Food povety: Households, food banks and free school meals’. (Accessed 12/12/2023)

Institute for Fiscal Studies (2020) ‘Family time use and home learning during the COVID-19 lockdown’. IFS. (Accessed 12/01/2024)

Lewis, G., McCloud, T. & Callender, C. (2021) ‘Higher education and mental health: analyses of the LSYPE cohorts’. Department for Education

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M., Manstead, A. S. R., & Easterbrook, M. J. (2019). ‘Accounting for unequal access to higher education: The role of social identity factors. Group Processes and Intergroup Relations’, 22, 371–389.  https://doi.org/10.1177/1368430219829824

Manfra, L. (2020) ‘Impact of Homelessness on School Readiness Skills and Early Academic Achievement: A Systematic Review of the Literature’

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Office for Students (2023) ‘Insight brief 19. Protecting students as consumers’. 

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Published 18 January 2024

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