Year 6 students move onto secondary schools with skills of an average eight-year-old, the findings said

A third of white primary school students from disadvantaged backgrounds leave primary schools without adequate fluency of reading, a damning report revealed.

New research has revealed that approximately one in three white pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds in England are finishing primary education without sufficient reading ability to cope with progressing to secondary school.

The study by Fischer Family Trust found that 33 per cent of these children read below 90 words correct per minute — the threshold considered necessary for secure reading fluency.

By contrast, only 20 per cent of their more affluent peers fall below this benchmark.

The findings indicate that these struggling readers possess literacy skills comparable to the average year 3 pupil, leaving them three years behind where they should be.

The FFT research examined more than one million reading fluency assessments involving 231,000 pupils across 1,570 schools between September 2023 and June 2026.

White pupils from poorer households performed at a lower reading fluency throughout their primary years compared with both wealthier classmates and disadvantaged children from other ethnic backgrounds.

Just last week, an independent inquiry into white working-class educational outcomes delivered damning conclusions about the current "failing" system.

The Independent Inquiry into White Working Class Educational Outcomes ruled an overhaul of the education system was required to mend a broken system.

That landmark investigation determined the education system was "not set up to serve white working-class children and families".

Paul Charman, FFT's managing director, said the most alarming discovery was not simply that white disadvantaged pupils lagged behind, but that this gap persisted through the school system.

"A third of white disadvantaged pupils are leaving primary school without secure reading fluency," he said.

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"This should concern anyone interested in improving educational outcomes and narrowing disadvantage gaps."

James Bowen, Assistant General Secretary at the NAHT school leaders' union, said disparities in reading ability emerge before children even begin formal schooling, reflected in their vocabulary differences observable by the age of five.

Hamid Patel, Star Academies CEO and inquiry co-chair, said the findings reinforced calls for renewed national focus on reading fluency from primary through early secondary years.

"I know, more than most, that change will not come overnight, but for the first time in a long time, white working-class children have a Government that will fight for them," Bridget Phillipson, the Education Secretary, said after the revealing report.

Experts have warned that the pupils lacking adequate reading fluency will struggle to engage with the secondary curriculum, leading to disengagement and increased school absence.

Mr Charman stressed that reading fluency underpins success across all subjects, and without it, pupils inevitably disengage and drift away from education entirely.

Meanwhile, Mr Bowen stressed that tackling the problem requires intervention beginning in the early years, with strong support for families alongside school-based efforts.

"This is not a new problem, but it has proven a stubbornly difficult one to solve," he said.

The inquiry into white working-class outcomes represents a significant acknowledgement of longstanding educational inequalities affecting this demographic group.

Meanwhile, Mr Patel warned: "If we get this right, we give pupils a genuine chance to succeed; if we do not, the consequences are long-lasting."