Teaching in classes grouped by ability does not hamper progress of less able pupils, study finds
A new study from University College London's Institute of Education, backed by the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF), suggests that teaching secondary school pupils in England in classes grouped by ability (setting) does not negatively impact the progress of less able students. The research, focusing on mathematics attainment and self-confidence in Year 7 and 8 pupils, found that high-achieving students made slower progress in mixed-ability classes compared to those in ability-grouped settings.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA new study from University College London's Institute of Education, backed by the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF), suggests that teaching secondary school pupils in England in classes grouped by ability (setting) does not negatively impact the progress of less able students. The research, focusing on mathematics attainment and self-confidence in Year 7 and 8 pupils, found that high-achieving students made slower progress in mixed-ability classes compared to those in ability-grouped settings. Conversely, the study indicated that setting did not significantly harm the attainment of low-prior-attaining or socioeconomically disadvantaged pupils. The findings challenge decades of debate surrounding mixed-ability education and suggest potential benefits for high-flyers without detriment to lower-achieving students.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedSchools with mixed classes made one month’s less progress overall compared to schools using setting.
High-achieving students in mixed-ability classes made two months’ less progress on average compared with students in schools using setting by attainment.
Setting by ability did not significantly harm the attainment of low-prior-attaining or socioeconomically disadvantaged pupils.
Pupils in mixed-attainment schools showed negative effects on self-confidence in maths compared with those in schools using setting.
Ability grouping has no negative impact on lower-achievers and helps teachers manage workload.