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Deaf young people less likely to gain qualifications

Published Date: 30 Mar 2017

Data published by the Department for Education today shows deaf young people in England are still failing to achieve the same qualifications as their hearing peers.

In 2016, 44% of deaf young people had achieved two A-Levels or equivalent technical qualifications by age 19 – a slight improvement on 43% in 2015.

While the attainment gap has narrowed, this still means well over half of deaf young people are failing to achieve A-level standard qualifications, compared to just 35% of those with no identified special educational need.

We're calling on the Department for Education to take action to close this gap sooner. Martin McLean, our Education and Training Policy Advisor, said: “Deafness is not a learning disability; there is no reason why deaf young people cannot achieve the same things as their hearing friends, given the right support.

“We had high expectations that the 2014 SEN reforms would help deaf young people to achieve higher qualifications, but sadly today’s figures suggest they are not yet having the desired impact. The Government needs to do more to ensure that colleges, schools and apprenticeship providers can put specialist support in place to help deaf students to make up ground lost earlier in education.”