A new report says that pupils from poorer backgrounds are 18 months behind when it comes to GCSEs - that is roughly two grades. Yet at the same time the claim is that 85% of pupils are in good or outstanding schools compared to just 66% in 2010.
The two cannot be right.
Another part claims that those on free school meals for at least 80% of their time in school are almost two years behind. What the hell is going on?
One issue has to be the funding formula.
London pupils, where standards have definitely risen, get about £1,300 more per year than the national average. Six of the seven poorest performing regions get less than the average. Coincidence?
To put that in context an average sized school (900 pupils) gets £1,170,000 more in London than the West Midlands. That money will get an extra 12 mid-range but experienced teachers = two per 180 pupil year group - £420,000. Five technical staff for varying subjects / support - £150,000. The remaining £600,000, if spent wisely, could get in all sorts of extra ancillary staff, text books, equipment and services.
With a funding formula like that it is no wonder that some areas do better than others.