Class casts a long shadow: graduates from disadvantaged backgrounds earn 13% less a decade after leaving university; a gap larger than headline gender pay gaps.

Controling for University & course choice this gap drops to around 7%, but when you compare graduates with the same degree, from the same university *and* the same employer, a gap remains. Around 5% lower pay persists; over Β£2,800 a year.

Think class is a thing of the past?

#class #education

h/t Nick Harrison/Sutton Trust/LinkedIn

@ChrisMayLA6 "Controlling for university and course choice" *removes* some class bias, doesn't it, as class influences those choices?

There's plenty of outreach work for example to counter the "people like me never go to Oxbridge so I won't even apply" mindset. Which wouldn't exist if it wasn't needed.

@TimWardCam

all true, but what it also demonstrate was even with the 'right' degree prejudice is still evident (which is interesting if there is an argument that the 'best' universities are aids to social mobility)

@ChrisMayLA6 @TimWardCam Could be effect of employer prejudice &/or relative lack of confidence of "non-standard" applicants. I'm not surprised.

@annehargreaves @ChrisMayLA6 I once saw a CV which said "University of Hertfordshire" and then in big letters "formally Hatfield Poly".

Very sensible of the applicant. Hatfield Poly had a good reputation for that sort of graduate, but at the time nobody had ever heard of the (recently rebadged) University of Hertfordshire.

@TimWardCam @annehargreaves

I was once interviewed for a senior lectureship at the Open University & didn't get it... some time later talking to one of the panel members (who was drunk & indiscreet, and didn't realise that I *was* that candidate)) at a conference, they told me the Head of Department had said it was close between the top two candidates on one panel but had used the OU degree to discount the second placed candidate (and yes through the context I knew it was me)... extraordinary!