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People who attend these nine schools are 94 times more likely to join Britain's elite

So-called Clarendon Schools produce nearly 10 per cent of all 'Who's Who' entrants

Samuel Osborne
Wednesday 01 November 2017 06:36 EDT
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The move comes after staff and pupils were asked what traits they thought the school should be instilling in their students
The move comes after staff and pupils were asked what traits they thought the school should be instilling in their students (Getty)

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Pupils from nine public schools are 94 times more likely to join Britain's powerful elite than their peers, researchers have found.

The privileged establishments, which include Eton and Westminster, produce nearly 10 per cent of all Who's Who entrants despite traditionally educating just 0.15 per cent of the population.

The study, conducted by researchers at the London School of Economics and published in the American Sociological Review, examined the past and present influence of the nine so-called Clarendon Schools: Charterhouse, Eton, Harrow, Merchant Taylor’s, Rugby, Shrewsbury, St Paul’s, Westminster, and Winchester College.

They studied the past 125 years of Who's Who, which lists the most prominent MPs, peers, senior civil servants and heads of museums and large arts organisations.

Although the schools' disproportionate influence had fallen since the start of the 20th century, the study found the decline had stalled in the past 16 years and they remain "extraordinarily powerful".

Of the UK's 54 prime ministers, 36 (67 per cent) were educated at one of the elite schools.

Even among Oxbridge graduates, alumni from the nine Clarendon Schools are around twice as likely to reach elite positions.

Dr Aaron Reeves and Dr Sam Friedman, the joint lead authors of the paper, said: “Although the Clarendon schools have not always been the best performing schools in the country they have consistently remained the most successful in propelling their alumni into elite positions.

"Clearly their power lies beyond simple academic excellence and may be rooted in an extensive extra-curricular education that endows old boys with a particular way of being in the world that signals elite male status to others.

"While the democratisation of education clearly dented the influence of these elite schools, their power remains a testament to how far adrift Britain lies from true equality of opportunity.”

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