Risk of not being in employment, education or training (NEET) in late adolescence is signalled by school readiness measures at 4-5 years

education
Authors

Matthew Warburton

Megan L. Wood

Kuldeep Sohal

John Wright

Mark Mon-Williams

Amy L. Atkinson

Published

2024

Doi
Materials
APA7 Citation

Warburton, M., Wood, M. L., Sohal, K., Wright, J., Mon-Williams, M., & Atkinson, A. L. (2024). Risk of not being in employment, education or training (NEET) in late adolescence is signalled by school readiness measures at 4-5 years. BMC Public Health, 24.

Abstract

Background

Not being in employment, education, or training (NEET) is associated with poor health (physical and mental) and social exclusion. We investigated whether England’s statutory school readiness measure conducted at 4-5 years provides a risk signal for NEET in late adolescence.

Methods

We identified 8,118 individuals with school readiness measures at 4-5 years and NEET records at 16-17 years using Connected Bradford, a bank of linked routinely collected datasets. Children were categorised as ‘school ready’ if they reached a ‘Good Level of Development’ on the Early Years Foundation Stage Profile. We used probit regression and structural equation modelling to investigate the relationship between school readiness and NEET status and whether it primarily relates to academic attainment.

Results

School readiness was significantly associated with NEET status. A larger proportion of young people who were not school ready were later NEET (11%) compared to those who were school ready (4%). Most of this effect was attributable to shared relationships with academic attainment, but there was also a direct effect. Measures of deprivation and Special Educational Needs were also strong predictors of NEET status.

Conclusions

NEET risk factors occur early in life. School readiness measures could be used as early indicators of risk, with interventions targeted to prevent the long-term physical and mental health problems associated with NEET, especially in disadvantaged areas. Primary schools are therefore well placed to be public health partners in early intervention strategies.