Streaming Article

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What does the research say about the impact of streaming, setting and attainment

grouping on students?

August 11, 2020

By Nina Hood

Earlier this week a teacher wrote to me asking what the research says about the impact
of streaming in schools. We have briefly touched on this issue in our resources on high
expectation teaching, however, have never tackled it head on. Given the prevalence of
some form of attainment grouping in New Zealand schools (this article touches on a
number of different attainment[1] grouping practices– streaming, setting, banding and
within-class grouping), exploring the research in this area seems a worthwhile
undertaking[2]. For anyone concerned about educational inequality, what I uncovered in
the research makes for some pretty grim reading.

Arguments for utilising some form of attainment grouping suggest that separating
students into ‘ability’ or attainment groups enables teachers to stretch the most ‘able’
students and to support those who are ‘struggling’. While the rationale is
understandable, the evidence suggests that grouping by attainment typically
exacerbates inequalities in education rather than reducing them.

Overall, the evidence demonstrates that streaming or setting has little if any overall
benefit in terms of student academic outcomes. Digging a bit deeper, the research
suggests that while there may be small achievement gains for higher attaining students,
the impact on students in lower attaining groups is negative. The evidence on within-
class attainment grouping (a practice used most frequently in primary schools) similarly
suggests that there is less benefit for lower attaining students, and that within-class
attainment grouping is most successful if groups regularly change, students can move
between groups, and that all students have opportunities to receive high quality
instruction and to engage in rigorous tasks. Recent research found that in classes that
utilise some form of attainment grouping, ‘low attaining learners fall behind by one or
two months a year, on average, when compared with the progress of similar students in
classes with mixed ability groups’, and that this effect is particularly strong in
mathematics where setting is most common.[3]

Streaming and setting also have been found to have a negative impact on the social and
emotional outcomes of many students. Research suggests that streaming can
exacerbate the effect of socio-economic background on educational achievement,
thereby reinforcing already existing social disadvantage experienced by certain groups
of students. Furthermore, streaming often increases racial segregation within schools
and there is evidence to suggest that streaming decreases students’ acceptance of
racial difference and general positive interaction between racial groups. Streaming also
has been shown to have a negative impact on the self-concept, confidence and
motivation of students in lower streams, which in turn negatively impacts on their
academic achievement and progress.

Streaming further disadvantages students from low-income families because the


criteria and processes used to allocate students to different groups or streams are
often problematic. In many instances, the allocation of students is not based solely on
past academic achievement but also teachers’ perceptions of student behaviour and
previous achievement. This finding is supported by recent New Zealand research, which
showed that teacher judgments about student achievement in reading and writing were
systematically lower for marginalised students after controlling for standardised
achievement differences.[4]

The inequality of outcomes resulting from streaming or attainment grouping in part


stems from the different ways that teachers work with higher and lower streams or
groups. Teachers have been found to prefer teaching and to be more motivated when
teaching higher attainment groups. Furthermore, teachers’ expectations of students in
different groups differ significantly, which influences both the curriculum students in
different groups access and the pedagogical practices teachers use. Students in lower
ability groups typically receive a slower pace of instruction and less challenging work,
which serves to enhance educational inequalities.

The prevalence of some form of streaming or attainment grouping in New Zealand


schools can make it difficult for schools to think about whether and how to make a
change. However, given the link between attainment grouping and increased
educational inequalities, it is imperative that schools question their existing practices.
The questions below may help to start the conversation in schools about the practice
and impact of attainment grouping.

1. Why do you use attainment groups? Do student outcomes (broadly


conceptualised) suggest that your reasons for attainment grouping are
justified?
2. What does student achievement data show about the progress and
attainment of students in different groups?
3. Have you collected student voice to understand how grouping practices
impact on the social and emotional learning and attitudes to learning of all
students?
4. How do teacher perceptions and expectations, pedagogical practices, and
rigour of the curriculum differ when teaching different groups of students?
How do you know this?
5. How do you currently allocate students to groups? Have you assessed
whether your grouping criteria could disadvantage certain students?
6. How flexible are you in your grouping arrangements?

[1] Attainment is used rather than ability due to the literature suggesting that schools
often confuse current (or recent) educational attainment with a notion of innate
potential academic ‘ability’.

[2] This article has drawn on a range of research studies to inform the arguments made.
See in particular: Higgins, S. et al. (2015). The Sutton Trust – Education Endowment
Foundation Teaching and Learning Toolkit. London: Education Endowment Foundation;
Johnston, O., & Wildy, H. (2016). The effects of streaming in the secondary school on
learning outcomes for Australian students – A review of the international
literature. Australian Journal of Education,  60 (1), 42-59. Taylor, B. et al. (2017). Factors
deterring schools from mixed attainment teaching practice. Pedagogy, Culture &
Society, 25 (3), 327-345; Taylor, B. et al. (2019). Why is it difficult for schools to establish
equitable practices in allocating students to attainment ‘sets’? British Journal of
Educational Studies, 67 (1), 5-24.

[3] Higgins, S. et al. (2015). The Sutton Trust – Education Endowment Foundation


Teaching and Learning Toolkit. London: Education Endowment Foundation.

[4] Meissel, K. et al. (2016). Subjectivity of teacher judgments: Exploring student


characteristics that influence teacher judgments of student ability. Teaching and
Teacher Education, 65, 48-60.

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