British Bangladeshis are doing astonishingly well at school
Good jobs and household riches remain out of reach
In 1985 two articles about the Bangladeshi population of east London appeared—one in an academic journal, the other in an education report. Both were despondent. Bangladeshi children were “seriously underachieving” at school, said the education study. The academic paper described knots of unemployed men hanging around the streets, and forecast even worse for Bangladeshis as London deindustrialised. Barring a major intervention, the authors wrote, “they will become more marginalised than at present.”
This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Another East End success”
Britain November 26th 2022
- Why Britain is a world leader in offshore wind
- Britain’s economic outlook is very gloomy
- What do street names tell you about Britain?
- Scotland’s independence movement suffers a setback at the Supreme Court
- Wales’s trade in leeches and maggots
- British Bangladeshis are doing astonishingly well at school
- It is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of Tory rule
More from Britain
Why have Britain’s bond yields jumped sharply?
Mostly, blame Donald Trump. But Labour’s policies haven’t helped
The phenomenon of sexual strangulation in Britain
A survey suggests the risky practice is more common than you might think
The decline in remote working hits Britain’s housing market
A return to the office means a return to town
Britons are keener than ever to bring back lost and rare species
Immigrants that everyone can get behind
A much-praised British scheme to help disabled workers is failing them
It lavishes spending on some, and unfairly deprives others
Rolls-Royce cars pushes the pedal on customisation
Be your own Bond villain