Contextual information
Gathering information about individual pupils' context helps us to:
Select the links below for more on contextual information.
Typical background information we collect about a pupil includes the following.
| Gender |
| Special educational needs |
| Eligibility for free school meals |
| First language |
| Date of joining |
| Ethnicity |
| Age |
| In care |
| Home address including postcode |
| Attendance |
| Prior attainment |
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Viewing and describing contextual information
As you view contextual information you need to look for characteristics that are not average (away from the centre line on this chart) and then look at the trend to identify if the background context is stable, rising or falling within the school population.
The following phrases are used to describe a school’s context based upon the percentile value:

So for instance if a school was in the 87th percentile for number of pupils on roll, then the school is described as well above average in terms of the school roll.
Pupil mobility is 'the total movement in and out of schools by pupils other than at the usual times of joining and leaving' (Ofsted 2002). It exists in schools but for some the high levels of mobility make demands on school systems, resources, staff and the stable community of pupils.
There are several ways of measuring pupil mobility including:
1) MOBILITY = Pupils joining school + pupils leaving school x 1002) The stability indicator (as used in RAISEonline) identifies the percentage of pupils who joined the school before the 1st October in a given year.
To help remember: high stability = low mobility low stability = high mobility


Pupil attendance is registered twice a day. An authorised absence is absence with permission from the school and includes instances for which a satisfactory explanation has been provided (for example illness).
Unauthorised absence is absence without permission from the school and includes all unexplained or unjustified absences.
We are able to use attendance data to:
FSM – entitlement to free school meals has been widely used as an indicator of deprivation and has often been used as a proxy for low income.
IDACI – income deprivation affecting children index, provided by the office of the deputy prime minister. It measures the proportion of children under the age of 16 in an area living in low income households. The indicator, used in RAISEonline, ranges from 0.00 (least deprived) to 1.00 (most deprived) with 0.14 being around average. The measurement uses seven domains that include income benefits, health statistics and recorded crime. The IDACI uses lower level super output areas that are similar size to electoral wards.
Acorn – a classification of regional neighbourhoods which uses data from the 2001 census information, classifying each UK street as one of 56 categories and uses the whole postcode.
TopLooking deeper into the school data, such as viewing the context information by year group, allows us to build a picture of how the school population is built up or changes. If differences occur, consider if it is as a result of a changing cohort over time.

See also: Matched data