More than 79,000 children have missed out on a place at their first-choice secondary school for this September, official statistics figures reveal today.
Schools Minister Nick Gibb said too many pupils – nearly one in six – would be going to a secondary school that was not their top choice.
The statistics break down the secondary school offers made to more than 512,000 children by 151 local authorities in England on 1 March.
They show that nationally:
· 84.6 per cent of children received an offer at their first-choice school. This is up 1.4 percentage points on last year.
· 95.6 per cent were offered a place at one of their top three preferred schools. This is a 0.7 percentage point increase on 2010.
This year there were far fewer children applying for a similar number of secondary school places. The number of children decreased by 17,500 on 2010 while there were 1,200 fewer places available.
Schools Minister Nick Gibb said:
More than 79,000 children missed out on their first choice of secondary school, nearly one in six of the entire year group, and more than 22,000 do not even get into any of their top three schools.
These figures expose the fact that there simply aren’t enough good schools.
Too many parents are forced to choose between schools which don’t deliver the academic standards and good behaviour they demand.
Yesterday’s OECD report underlined the serious problems in our school system and showed how far we have fallen behind other leading countries over the past decade. That is why we are restoring the integrity of the curriculum and exams, and giving more powers to teachers.
Our reforms to education, with a focus on raising standards of behaviour, trusting teachers and encouraging new schools to be established, are designed to deliver higher standards and genuine choice for parents.
Only when every school is regarded by parents as a good school will we be able to remove the anxiety parents suffer when choosing a school for their children.





