The Door That Was Always Open

England's top schools admit 20% fewer low-income children than live nearby. The gap isn't accidental. It's structural.

The Door That Was Always Open
England's top schools admit 20% fewer low-income children than live nearby. The gap isn't accidental. It's structural.
A school corridor. Children walking in. It looks ordinary.
But the highest-ranked schools take fewer low-income children than live nearby — twenty percent fewer. Not because those children aren't close. Because the gap is built into the system.
It doesn't look like exclusion. It looks like selection. The difference is invisible by design.
A child walks toward the door. It's open. It was always going to be.

Episode 01 — School Admissions
England's top 500 secondary schools (ranked by attainment) admit 20% fewer pupils eligible for free school meals than are present in their local catchment areas. 1 Socioeconomic selectivity within catchments accounts for two-thirds of this gap — not school location alone. The sorting happens before anyone walks through the door. 2
One pattern. Repeated.

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