Policy Exchange - New research shows Free Schools boost performance of local schools

10 Mar 2015 01:03 PM

​Free Schools are raising standards for other pupils across the local community, especially in some of the poorest performing schools, as well for the pupils who attend them. 

A Rising Tide sets out for the first time detailed analysis on the performance of local schools where a Free School has opened.
 
The paper finds that competition is driving up standards at both primary and secondary level. It says that contrary to some of the criticisms levelled at Free Schools, they do not drag down the results of neighbouring schools – but rather, they improve them. This undermines one of the key criticisms of opponents of Free Schools over the last five years.
 
The analysis is based on comparing the three geographically closest similar schools within the same Local Authority to each of the 171 mainstream primary and secondary free schools open so far. It  uses increases in the primary and secondary headline measures of % of pupils achieving level 4 at key stage 2 and 5 of pupils achieving 5 GCSEs A*-C before and after a Free School is announced or opened near to them as the metrics for comparison.
 
The research found:

The research also found that concerns Free Schools would damage other schools are untrue:

The research concludes that there is no justification for just restricting Free Schools to areas where there is a need for new schools:

The report sets out a number of recommendations for how free schools can grow and expand to provide real choice to parents:

View Report: http://www.policyexchange.org.uk/images/publications/a%20rising%20tide.pdf