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Independent Schools in Hackney. Information downloaded from Edubase, geocoded using coordinates from Hackney Code Point (OS).
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Information on all schools in England including local authority maintained schools, academies, free schools, studio schools, university technical colleges and independent schools. The information includes address, school type and phone number. This information comes from EduBase, DfE’s register of schools, and will be updated every month. http://www.education.gov.uk/edubase/home.xhtml
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
United Kingdom UK: Secondary Education: Pupils: % Female data was reported at 49.596 % in 2015. This records a decrease from the previous number of 49.805 % for 2014. United Kingdom UK: Secondary Education: Pupils: % Female data is updated yearly, averaging 49.195 % from Dec 1971 (Median) to 2015, with 45 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 49.921 % in 2013 and a record low of 48.422 % in 1971. United Kingdom UK: Secondary Education: Pupils: % Female data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by World Bank. The data is categorized under Global Database’s UK – Table UK.World Bank: Education Statistics. Female pupils as a percentage of total pupils at secondary level includes enrollments in public and private schools.; ; UNESCO Institute for Statistics; Weighted average; Each economy is classified based on the classification of World Bank Group's fiscal year 2018 (July 1, 2017-June 30, 2018).
Ofsted publishes this data to provide a more up-to-date picture of the results within https://parentview.ofsted.gov.uk/" class="govuk-link">Parent View. This management information covers submissions received in the previous 365 days for independent schools inspected by Ofsted and maintained schools and academies in England.
Within these releases, you can find:
Due to COVID-19, routine inspections were paused from April 2020 until September 2021. While Parent View is open for submissions all year round, parents are encouraged to fill out the Parent View survey during inspections. Please bear this in mind when interpreting releases where data was collected during this period, as there were fewer submissions received.
The questions used in the Parent View survey changed in September 2019. Due to this change, the releases in the following academic year only contain submissions from the first academic term (January 2020 release), then the first and second academic terms (April 2020 release). Please bear this in mind when comparing to previous releases. Future releases will contain a full rolling 365-day period of the new question data.
These releases now only include submissions for schools that were open and eligible for inspection by Ofsted at the point the management information was produced. Because of this change, the data from these new releases is not completely comparable with the data found within the 2014 to 2015 and 2015 to 2016 releases.
This management information covers submissions received to https://parentview.ofsted.gov.uk/" class="govuk-link">Parent View, in each academic year since 2014 to 2015, for independent schools and maintained schools and academies in England.
These releases only include submissions for schools that were open and eligible for inspection by Ofsted throughout each academic year.
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Semi-structured interviews with 91 young women aged between 14-18 years (with 56 interviewed twice) - total of 147 interviews. Interviews were undertaken in 4 different independent / private schools in one area of England - School A, B, C and D.A three-year, longitudinal study was conducted in four private schools in England. The aim of the research was to examine how social location, measured in terms of social class and being educated in the private sector, shapes possibilities for agentic practice among young women. Ninety-one young women aged 14-18 years were interviewed, with 56 being re-interviewed 12-24 months later. The study facilitated the collection of narratives by young women about their experiences of education, peer and family.relationships, and their aspirations for the future. Young women from Years 10-13 were invited to participate in an in-depth interview with the Principal Investigator - using a quiet space within the school grounds. A loosely-structured interview schedule was used for both interviews. The first interview (with 91 young women) asked young women to describe themselves and their families, explored reasons for choosing the particular school they were at, describing some experiences/moments/events where they felt good about themselves/proud of themselves and other events/experiences when they have felt less good in the past 6-12 months. Participants were also asked to discuss their future aspirations (short-, medium, and longer-term). During the second interview (with 56 of the 91 young women) - they were asked to reflect on the 12-24 months since they had last been interviewed and to comment on positive and negatives changes, elements of their lives they felt confident about and less confident about, their future aspirations and their reflections on their schooling experiences. All interviews were audio-recorded with permission and then transcribed and anonymised by the same professional transcriber.
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Table shows numbers of all Schools and Pupils by Type of School.
School types included in this publication are State-Funded Primary, Secondary and Special schools, Independent schools, Pupil Referral Units, and Alternative Provision.
See DfE website
Full daily dataset of all schools and pupil numbers are available from the DFE EduBase site
Cartogram created from this data:
A list of all independent schools and special post-16 institutions for children with special educational needs or disabilities (SEND) approved under section 41 of the Children and Families Act 2014 in England and Wales.
You can filter the list by local authority or by type of setting.
Our guide for independent special schools and special post-16 institutions explains how to apply for approval under section 41.
Contact hns.sos@education.gov.uk to request removal from the approved list, stating your reason. We will remove your institution in the next update and notify local authorities. The published list includes all removed institutions.
Once removed, you cannot re-apply for one full academic year.
Details of all special schools in England are available on the https://www.get-information-schools.service.gov.uk/Search" class="govuk-link">Department for Education’s Get Information about Schools system. This includes:
The SEND guide for parents and carers explains how parents can ask for one of these schools or special post-16 institutions to be named in their child’s education, health and care plan.
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Data are collected annually through the School census exercise.
This takes place in early October when each school is required to submit a return detailing information about the numbers of pupils on their register.
Among the information collected are details on: year group, gender, age, religion, ethnicity, Special Educational Needs and on newcomer pupils.
Statistics produced from the school census exercise qualify as National Statistics.
Schools fall under various management types:
Controlled schools are managed by the Education Authority through Boards of Governors.
Primary and secondary school Boards of Governors consist of representatives of transferors (mainly the Protestant Churches) along with representatives of parents,
teachers and the Education Authority. Nursery, grammar and special school Boards of Governors consist of representatives of the latter 3 categories.
Within the controlled sector there is a small but growing number of controlled integrated schools.
Voluntary (maintained) schools are managed by Boards of Governors which consist of members nominated by trustees (mainly Roman Catholic),
along with representatives of parents, teachers and the Education Authority.
Voluntary schools vary in the rates of capital grant to which they are entitled, depending on the management structures they have adopted.
A majority are entitled to capital grants at 100%.
Voluntary: (Non-Maintained) schools are mainly voluntary grammar schools, managed by Boards of Governors
which consist of persons appointed as provided in each school's scheme of management along with representatives of parents and teachers and, in most cases,
members appointed by the Department or the Education Authority. Voluntary Grammar Schools are funded directly by the Department.
In recent years a number of grant-maintained integrated schools have been established at primary level and post-primary levels.
Such schools are funded directly by the Department.
The practical operation of all schools has increasingly become a matter for Boards of Governors. They are responsible
for the delivery of the curriculum, admission of pupils, and in the case of schools with delegated budgets, for the management of their own financial affairs,
including staffing matters.
Independent schools do not receive recurrent funding from the Dept Education.
Interested parties can now request extracts of data from the NPD using an improved application process accessed through the following website; GOV.UK The first version of the NPD, including information from the first pupil level School Census matched to attainment information, was produced in 2002. The NPD is one of the richest education datasets in the world holding a wide range of information about pupils and students and has provided invaluable evidence on educational performance to inform independent research, as well as analysis carried out or commissioned by the department. There are a range of data sources in the NPD providing information about children’s education at different phases. The data includes detailed information about pupils’ test and exam results, prior attainment and progression at each key stage for all state schools in England. The department also holds attainment data for pupils and students in non-maintained special schools, sixth form and further education colleges and (where available) independent schools. The NPD also includes information about the characteristics of pupils in the state sector and non-maintained special schools such as their gender, ethnicity, first language, eligibility for free school meals, awarding of bursary funding for 16-19 year olds, information about special educational needs and detailed information about any absences and exclusions. Extracts of the data from NPD can be shared (under strict terms and conditions) with named bodies and third parties who, for the purpose of promoting the education or well-being of children in England, are:- • Conducting research or analysis • Producing statistics; or • Providing information, advice or guidance. The department wants to encourage more third parties to use the data for these purposes and produce secondary analysis of the data. All applications go through a robust approval process and those granted access are subject to strict terms and conditions on the security, handling and use of the data, including compliance with the Data Protection Act. Anyone requesting access to the most sensitive data will also be required to submit a business case. More information on the application process including the User Guide, Application Form, Security Questionnaire and a full list of data items available can be found from the NPD web page at:- https://www.gov.uk/national-pupil-database-apply-for-a-data-extract
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
Ofsted statistics on the inspections and outcomes of non-association independent schools in England.
Secure Access versions of Next Steps have more restrictive access conditions than Safeguarded versions available under the standard End User Licence (see 'Access' section).
Secure Access versions of the Next Steps include:
SN 5545 - Next Steps: Sweeps 1-9, 2004-2023 includes the main
Next Steps survey data from Sweep 1 (age 14) to Sweep 9 (age 32).
Latest edition information
For the eighteenth edition (February 2025), the Sweep 9 Derived Variables data file has been updated with some newly derived variables categorised under the household (W9DCHNO12, W9DTOTCH, W9DTOTOWNCH) and education (W9DAQLVLH, W9DVQLVLH) sections. The Longitudinal data file have been updated with changes to the weight variables. Three out of the four weights in the previous version have been removed. W9FINWTALLB has been renamed to W9FINWT in line with previous sweeps. The user guide has been updated to reflect these changes. Furthermore, the derived variables user guide has been merged into the main user guide and can be accessed via Appendix 1.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
This publication combines information from the school census (state-funded schools), school level annual school census (independent schools) and general hospital school census on pupils with special educational needs (SEN).Data at school level including number of pupils by SEN provision and type of need.
Data shows number of pupils in publicly funded primary and secondary schools by Glasgow Data Zones between the year 2003 and 2012. This information is taken from the September Scottish Pupil Census for the relevant year, of publicly funded schools and hence does not include: Pupils attending grant aided Special Schools; Pupils attending private Independent Schools; Pupils educated outwith the school education system (for example at home) or Adults attending publicly funded secondary schools. The figures are based on the postcodes from where the pupils came from and were submitted for about 99% of pupils in publicly funded primary and secondary schools. More information on the methodology used is included in the metadata among the resouces. (c) Crown copyright, 2014. Data supplied by Scottish Neighbourhood Statistics Website Licence: None
The data contain information on 837 low-cost for-profit private schools (LCPS) from three districts in Punjab, Pakistan: Faisalabad, Gujranwala, and Sialkot. The past few decades have seen an exponential increase in the growth of these LCPS globally, and in countries like Pakistan and India, the private sector now commands a large and quickly increasing share of the market. Over forty percent of primary school enrolment in Pakistan is now in LCPS, and students in private schools in Pakistan far out-perform those in public schools. Yet, firm innovation and expansion is constrained for private schools, likely due to a range of supply-side and market level failures. The main research questions this study and the uploaded dataset seek to answer are: (1) To what extent are schools constrained by finance, and does the type of financing vehicle (loan vs equity) matter? (2) Is LCPS quality improvement constrained by a lack of access to appropriate quality-enhancing products and services, i.e. educational support services (ESS)? (3) Is there a positive interaction between access to finance and the provision of appropriate innovative investment opportunities? The dataset includes topics such as school administration, facilities, fees, enrolment, student population, finances, and financial expectations and literacy. Schools are uniquely identified using the variables mauza (administrative district) code and school code. While most of the variables are school-level, there are a few individual-level data pieces that were collected from the school owner. For each school we interviewed only one owner, therefore both schools and school owners are identified using the same mauza code and school code ID.
These performance tables provide information on the attainment of students of sixth-form age in local secondary schools and further education sector colleges in the academic year 2012 to 2013. They also show how these results compare with other schools and colleges in the local authority area and in England as a whole.
The tables report the results of 16- to 18-year-old students at the end of advanced level study in the 2012 to 2013 academic year. All schools and colleges in a local authority area are listed in alphabetical order, including:
Special schools that have chosen to be included are also listed, as are any sixth-form centres or consortia that operate in an area.
This year, the performance indicators are separated into three separate cohorts:
To be included in a cohort, a student needs to have taken at least one substantial qualification in one or more of the qualification types. Students following programmes of mixed qualification types may belong to more than one cohort, therefore full-time equivalent (FTE) figures are provided alongside student numbers. FTE figures take account of the proportion of time a student spends in each cohort based on the size of the qualification.
http://www.education.gov.uk/schools/performance/index.html" class="govuk-link">Performance tables
Joanna Edgell and Moira Nelson
0370 000 2288
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Published by the Department for Education based on information collected in the January 2015 school census, including information on the number of schools and pupils. It covers all types of school in England including: - local-authority-maintained schools - academies - free schools - studio schools - university technical colleges - independent schools The technical note explains the statistics. Information for London Borough of Barnet can be obtained by carrying out a search query on individual datasets.
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.
Next Steps (also known as the Longitudinal Study of Young People in England (LSYPE1)) is a major longitudinal cohort study following a nationally representative group of around 16,000 who were in Year 9 attending state and independent schools in England in 2004, a cohort born in 1989-90.
The first seven sweeps of the study were conducted annually (2004-2010) when the study was funded and managed by the Department for Education (DfE). The study mainly focused on the educational and early labour market experiences of young people.
In 2015 Next Steps was restarted, under the management of the Centre for Longitudinal Studies (CLS) at the UCL Faculty of Education and Society (IOE) and funded by the Economic and Social Research Council. The Next Steps Age 25 survey was aimed at increasing the understanding of the lives of young adults growing up today and the transitions out of education and into early adult life.
The Next Steps Age 32 Survey took place between April 2022 and September 2023 and is the ninth sweep of the study. The Age 32 Survey aimed to provide data for research and policy on the lives of this generation of adults in their early 30s. This sweep also collected information on many wider aspects of cohort members' lives including health and wellbeing, politics and social participation, identity and attitudes as well as capturing personality, resilience, working memory and financial literacy.
Next Steps survey data is also linked to the National Pupil Database (NPD), the Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), the Individualised Learner Records (ILR) and the Student Loans Company (SLC).
There are now two separate studies that began under the LSYPE programme. The second study, Our Future (LSYPE2) (available at the UK Data Service under GN 2000110), began in 2013 and will track a sample of over 13,000 young people annually from ages 13/14 through to age 20.
Further information about Next Steps may be found on the CLS website.
Secure Access datasets:
Secure Access versions of Next Steps have more restrictive access conditions than Safeguarded versions available under the standard End User Licence (see 'Access' section).
Secure Access versions of the Next Steps include:
When researchers are approved/accredited to access a Secure Access version of Next Steps, the Safeguarded (EUL) version of the study - Next Steps: Sweeps 1-9, 2004-2023 (SN 5545) - will be automatically provided alongside.
Users are only allowed one of the three Geographical Identifiers Census Boundaries studies: SN 8189 (2001 Census Boundaries), SN 8190 (2011 Census Boundaries), or SN 9337 (2021 Census Boundaries).
International Data Access Network (IDAN)
These data are now available to researchers based outside the UK. Selected UKDS SecureLab/controlled datasets from the Institute for Social and Economic Research (ISER) and the Centre for Longitudinal Studies (CLS) have been made available under the International Data Access Network (IDAN) scheme, via a Safe Room access point at one of the UKDS IDAN partners. Prospective users should read the UKDS SecureLab application guide for non-ONS data for researchers outside of the UK via Safe Room Remote Desktop Access. Further details about the IDAN scheme can be found on the UKDS International Data Access Network webpage and on the IDAN website.
The Next Steps: Sweep 9, 2022: Geographical Identifiers, 2021 Census Boundaries: Secure Access data include the address at interview linked to:
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.
Next Steps (also known as the Longitudinal Study of Young People in England (LSYPE1)) is a major longitudinal cohort study following a nationally representative group of around 16,000 who were in Year 9 attending state and independent schools in England in 2004, a cohort born in 1989-90.
The first seven sweeps of the study were conducted annually (2004-2010) when the study was funded and managed by the Department for Education (DfE). The study mainly focused on the educational and early labour market experiences of young people.
In 2015 Next Steps was restarted, under the management of the Centre for Longitudinal Studies (CLS) at the UCL Faculty of Education and Society (IOE) and funded by the Economic and Social Research Council. The Next Steps Age 25 survey was aimed at increasing the understanding of the lives of young adults growing up today and the transitions out of education and into early adult life.
The Next Steps Age 32 Survey took place between April 2022 and September 2023 and is the ninth sweep of the study. The Age 32 Survey aimed to provide data for research and policy on the lives of this generation of adults in their early 30s. This sweep also collected information on many wider aspects of cohort members' lives including health and wellbeing, politics and social participation, identity and attitudes as well as capturing personality, resilience, working memory and financial literacy.
Next Steps survey data is also linked to the National Pupil Database (NPD), the Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), the Individualised Learner Records (ILR) and the Student Loans Company (SLC).
There are now two separate studies that began under the LSYPE programme. The second study, Our Future (LSYPE2) (available at the UK Data Service under GN 2000110), began in 2013 and will track a sample of over 13,000 young people annually from ages 13/14 through to age 20.
Further information about Next Steps may be found on the CLS website.
Secure Access datasets:
Secure Access versions of Next Steps have more restrictive access conditions than Safeguarded versions available under the standard End User Licence (see 'Access' section).
Secure Access versions of the Next Steps include:
When researchers are approved/accredited to access a Secure Access version of Next Steps, the Safeguarded (EUL) version of the study - Next Steps: Sweeps 1-9, 2004-2023 (SN 5545) - will be automatically provided alongside.
The Student Loans Company (SLC) is a non-profit making government-owned organisation that administers loans and grants to students in colleges and universities in the UK. The Next Steps: Linked Administrative Datasets (Student Loans Company Records), 2007 - 2021: Secure Access includes data on higher education loans for those Next Steps participant who provided consent to SLC linkage in the age 25 sweep. The matched SLC data contains information about participant's applications for student finance, payment transactions posted to participant's accounts, repayment details and overseas assessment details.
The study includes four datasets:
Applicant: SLC data on cohort member’s application for student finance between academic years 2007 and 2020
Payments: SLC data on payment transactions made to cohort member between financial years 2007 and 2021.
Repayments: SLC data on cohort member’s repayment transactions between financial years 2009 and 2021.
Overseas: SLC data on overseas assessment for cohort member between 2007 and 2020
Data shows a list of private nurseries registered with Glasgow City Council for the 2014_2015 Academic year. Field names in the dataset include Service Name, Number of Places in 2014/15 Academic year, Telephone Number, Ward, Latitude, Longitude, Email Address and Address of nursery. Latitude and Longitude contained in the dataset was derived using Google Geocoding API. Data uploaded 2014-11-17T16:10:25 Data supplied by Education Services of Glasgow City Council Licence: None private-nurseries.geojson - https://dataservices.open.glasgow.gov.uk/Download/Organisation/de0f1bfc-ed16-429a-b03c-6a63a178efb1/Dataset/f2c6c35a-6653-492d-bbef-08cc86b9b495/File/7a020485-1944-45fc-9e32-3edf4bc03fe8/Version/2f08b1b8-7d1f-4a43-b1f6-ce487ec391e6 private-nursery.zip - https://dataservices.open.glasgow.gov.uk/Download/Organisation/de0f1bfc-ed16-429a-b03c-6a63a178efb1/Dataset/f2c6c35a-6653-492d-bbef-08cc86b9b495/File/956ca0b8-9587-40da-add7-b5f14d3382eb/Version/0ff365de-2282-4b35-b520-d1d94c024e5a
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Management information showing in-year and most recent inspections and outcomes.
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Independent Schools in Hackney. Information downloaded from Edubase, geocoded using coordinates from Hackney Code Point (OS).