7 days ago
- Politics
- Belfast Telegraph
Concerns over accuracy of department-led survey on integrated education in NI
Conversely though, the survey, which campaigners said they were 'blind-sided' by on its release on Tuesday morning, does show that almost three quarters of the 9,700 parents who responded to the questionnaire said they would prefer or would not mind if their child went to an integrated school.
The Belfast Telegraph also understands there are further concerns about how the findings have been presented after authors claimed almost 25% of parents have expressed a preference for their child 'not to attend an integrated school',
Meanwhile, it found 32.9% of parents said they had expressed a first preference for an integrated school, with 67.1% saying they hadn't.
The survey reported that quality of education was the most important (32.5%) factor considered when selecting an integrated school as first preference.
Quality of education was again the most important (39.6%) factor considered when selecting a non-Integrated school as first preference.
Almost a quarter of parents (24.0%) said they would rather their child was not educated in an Integrated school compared with 31.2% who preferred sending their child to an integrated school.
Of those who selected an integrated school as first preference, 85.3% stated that it was either important or very important that their child received their education in an integrated environment.
The Department said the survey was conducted specifically to asses the views of parents towards integrated education.
But it comes after Education Minister Paul Givan rejected a bid by Northern Ireland's largest school, Bangor Academy and Sixth Form College, to transform to integrated status earlier this year, despite a parental vote in favour of the move.
Though the Department's Parental School Admission Survey 2025 has been released as a stand alone document, it is expected to feed in to a more general survey due for release in December this year which will also incorporate other data collected by both The Life and Times Survey 2024 and a Lucid Talk poll conducted by the Integrated Education Fund.
The Lucid Talk poll found that 65% of parents felt integrated education should be the standard model for the school system in Northern Ireland while the Life and Times survey found that 55% of parents would prefer for their child to be educated in an integrated school.
Though the latest Department of Education survey found that, 32.9% of parents said they had expressed an integrated school as the first choice for their child, currently only around 8% of pupils attend a school with integrated status.
Proximity to home was the second most important factor in which school parents opted for, behind quality of education, though campaigners have pointed out that there remains a limited choice of integrated schools in many areas of NI.
Those who selected a non-integrated school were also asked if they would want their choice to transform to become an integrated school.
In response, 37.5% said they 'don't mind', while 37% responded 'no' and 16.9% said 'yes'.
The remainder said they did not know or would prefer not to say.
Almost eight out of 10 parents (78.4%) said they had considered a school's admissions policy before deciding on a first preference selection for their child.
Two thirds (66.4%) of parents made their school selections because their child met the admissions criteria well, though over a fifth (22.6%) of parents stated that the admissions criteria made no difference to their selection.
The funeral of Jaidyn Rice takes places in Bangor
Another potential issue is a lack of transparency over who responded to the survey, with the report noting that: 'policy officials responsible for drafting the Integrated Education Strategy contacted sectoral bodies asking them to encourage parents in their school sector to complete the survey and shared the link to the survey with them.
This means it is possible that parents who did not go through the admissions process in 2025 may have completed the survey if they chose to access it though the survey link.
This is considered unlikely, but it is not possible to determine the extent to 'which this may have occurred because the survey was anonymous.'
The department said the survey was issued by the Education Authority to 63,349 parents whose children were going through the school admission process to meet the requirements of the Integrated Education Act and to measure demand.