Britain | Ethnicity and success

British Bangladeshis are doing astonishingly well at school

Good jobs and household riches remain out of reach

A Muslim child from Bangladesh sits next to a Catholic child from Ireland at Kingsmead Primary School, which primarily serves children who live on the Kingsmead Estate in Homerton, Hackney, close to the site of the 2012 Olympic Games. Its population is diverse, a fact reflected in the 42 different languages spoken by the children as well as the composition of the pupils, 95% of whom are from an ethnic minority. The largest ethnic group is African, followed by Afro Caribbean, Bangladeshi, Turkish, Eastern European, and Irish traveller. Kingsmead children are, according to government data, some of the most economically deprived in the country. Despite these challenges the school strives to achieve the highest standards, with academic achievement above the national average ? impressive, considering that 85% of pupils speak English as a second language. (Photo by Gideon Mendel/In Pictures/Corbis via Getty Images)

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”

Frozen out

From the November 26th 2022 edition

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