A vision of Britain from 1801 to now.
Including maps, statistical trends and historical descriptions.
Since 1951, the census has gathered information on what point in the education system
individuals reached:
did they leave school as soon as was legal, without qualifications?
did they get GCSEs?
and did they go to university and get a degree?
In general, this information covers everyone of working age, so it has to be
seen as an 'average' of decisions to stay on at school or leave taken during
the forty or fifty years prior to the census.
Unfortunately, the variation in what was reported by different censuses means
none of our measures can be presented for every census, and also that the
precise definitions of measures vary from census to census, so precise rates
cannot generally be compared over time, only relative positions.
We hold these detailed statistics for Street, which we graph and tabulate here:
Available datasets | Period covered | Variables (number of categories) |
---|---|---|
Age at Termination of Education | 1951 |
Terminal Education Age
(5) |
Age at Termination of Education | 1961 |
Sex
(2) Terminal Education Age (6) |
Educational Level: Graduate | 1951 to 1961 |
Obtaining Degreed
(2) |
Educational Level: Unqualified | 1951 to 1961 |
Obtaining basic qualifications
(2) |
Read more about how we hold statistics here.