Lee Elliot Major gave up a dream job to become the UK鈥檚 first professor of social mobility. Donna Ferguson finds out why he made the move to academia 鈥 and his latest plans to improve the life chances for our poorest pupils. Lee Elliot Major recently confessed to a group of headteachers that he鈥檇 just walked past a London train station where he鈥檇 slept rough in his youth. 鈥淎ll the heads looked at me aghast,鈥 the UK鈥檚 first professor of social mobility recalls. 鈥淭hey hadn鈥檛 expected that.鈥 A former chief executive of the , he proudly lists on his CV the OBE he was given in 2019 for services to social mobility, with his many published works and a glittering array of academic honours, appointments and accolades. But perhaps equally relevant to his job at the University of Exeter 鈥 although not listed on his CV 鈥 are his experiences as a comprehensive school drop-out in the 1980s, when he worked as a bin man and a petrol station assistant. There were nights, back then, when he was 鈥渢echnically homeless鈥. He was a punk, he says, with 鈥渂ig earrings, eyeliner and blond spiky hair鈥 and frequently clashed with his 鈥渜uite strict鈥 father. 鈥淢y dad chucked me out a few times… I would have nowhere to go, and I remember鈥︹ he pauses, takes a deep breath 鈥 鈥渉im taking the front door key. That was quite a big thing for me. It did feel like I had… no home to speak of.鈥 He comes from a working-class family: his mother worked for the local council, his father was an electronic engineer. ‘Social mobility is personal as well as professional’ 鈥淣o one in my family had been to university,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here are lots of people in sociology and economics and education, thinking about inequality and social mobility. To me, it definitely is a personal as well as professional passion.鈥 Thinking cap beret wearing 18 year old in 1986 while retaking A levels at Richmond tertiary college in West London He was always interested in social justice and education was always important. He was so bright that the toughest boys at his local comp 鈥渦sed to be quite proud of me – I remember one of them saying: 鈥榟e鈥檚 going to be a brain surgeon when he grows up.鈥欌 Looking back, he thinks he may have been on the spectrum in some way鈥︹滻 could sit around looking at mathematical equations for hours.鈥 His 鈥渧ery supportive鈥 teachers recognised his potential and pushed him to apply to Cambridge. But instead of making him an offer, the Cambridge dons who interviewed him wrote to his school expressing concern for his wellbeing. 鈥淚 must have spoken about my personal life… It was quite chaotic.鈥 Shortly after he stopped going to school, left home and managed to get his own place 鈥渙n social security鈥. He was working for a builder he had met in the petrol station when, with a friend鈥檚 support, he got a second shot at university. 鈥淢y friend was from a typically middle-class family 鈥 dad was an architect, mum was a teacher 鈥 and they took me in for a time. That was really critical.鈥 His new 鈥渟urrogate parents鈥 encouraged him to retake his A-levels and he did well enough to secure a place at Sheffield, graduating with a PhD in theoretical physics six years later. ‘Shrinking opportunities to lead decent lives’ He is very aware that the 鈥渨ell trodden鈥 university route he took often only enables social mobility for the most academic disadvantaged children, and agrees with Katharine Birbalsingh, head of Michaela School, that attending an elite university is not the only road to success for a young person from an impoverished background. Future social mobility efforts should focus on making cultures inclusive to all talents, wherever they come from, rather than converting 鈥渨orking-class oiks into middle-class copies鈥, he says. 鈥淭he big issue facing our society is shrinking opportunities to lead decent lives with affordable homes and good jobs.鈥 London calling Speaking at London Guildhall in October 2022 warning that London risks becoming an exclusive enclave of elites Universities need to 鈥渦p their game鈥 in supporting students from poorer backgrounds – 鈥渘ot just getting them into university, but supporting them while they鈥檙e there鈥. But he also thinks it鈥檚 outrageous that there is no pupil premium funding in FE to support the poorest pupils who do not go down the university route. 鈥淭hat would be my one funding ask, if I could get extra money,鈥 he says, adding that one of the big problems facing the sector is the dominance of university-educated politicians and journalists. 鈥淲e have very few people in charge who understand or empathise with FE colleges or vocational routes鈥 we should focus on the young people who don鈥檛 go to university. But I also think there should be more university and FE links than there are at the moment.鈥 ‘Providing proper vocational options is a huge black hole’ He is carrying out policy workshops with the Department of Education to address the 鈥渇orgotten fifth鈥 – the 20 per cent of young people who leave school without a grade 4 at GCSE in English language and maths. 鈥淧roviding proper vocational options, as well as academic, is a huge black hole in our education system. And I think one of the reasons why we have so many young people leave without basic maths and English skills is because they are put off by a curriculum that is – and I know this sounds awful – a bit too academic.鈥 For many young people who are more vocational or creative, education in the UK is not as good as it could be. Widening access With non privileged state school students attending one of the Sutton Trusts university summer schools in 2017 as the Trusts first Chief Executive GCSEs label some children as failures. 鈥淲hat I would have, alongside GCSEs and some vocational offerings, would be every pupil having to pass a National Certificate, which would be more functional skills. So, for example, how do you use maths in everyday life? How do you communicate?鈥 It seems obvious to him that every pupil should leave school with those basic skills. He left his 鈥渄ream job鈥 at the Sutton Trust for Exeter in 2019 because he wanted to have more of a direct impact on the practice of teachers and universities, and more influence on the government. He is full of practical ideas about how social mobility could be improved. ‘Schools policy assumes everyone rises with good teaching’ For example, he would like Sure Start centres to be reintroduced 鈥渂ecause otherwise, as our research shows, you鈥檙e always in catch-up mode in the school system, with huge gaps at age 5 and pupils falling behind鈥. He also wants UCAS to reform personal statements, which he thinks offer middle-class children an unfair advantage, and to see more inclusive teaching. 鈥淪chools policy at the moment assumes that if you do good teaching – and that鈥檚 hard enough in itself – then everyone rises. I don鈥檛 agree.鈥 Teachers, he says, should have a 鈥渞eally explicit focus鈥 on disadvantaged learners. 鈥淭hat means knowing who they are and understanding their home environment, making sure you鈥檙e giving them feedback and thinking about what approaches benefit those children in particular.鈥 Like Birbalsingh, who announced last week that the The Social Mobility Commission will investigate which teaching styles work best to boost outcomes for poorer pupils, he thinks one of the most important questions the government needs to answer is: 鈥淲hat is it that schools, that are doing well for disadvantaged children, are doing? Which schools have done well over the past decade and how can we scale up that approach in an inclusive way?鈥 Persistent absence among disadvantaged pupils also needs to be addressed. 鈥淥ne of our studies showed that 40 per cent of children on free school meals are not coming to school regularly. They鈥檙e missing at least 10 per cent of sessions. This is a crisis.鈥 He sees it as a legacy of the pandemic, exacerbating educational inequalities that already existed. 鈥淩esearch has estimated that social mobility will decline for this generation… poorer children are up against it in a way that is so extreme now, compared to previous eras.鈥 ‘Don’t castigate parents for doing what’s best for their children’ Yet he admits he has paid for private tutors for his own children. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think you should castigate parents for trying to do what鈥檚 best for their children,鈥 he says, adding that it was a joint decision with his partner. 鈥淚 am obviously now very middle class… Sometimes I dwell on this a lot: to what extent am I challenging the system myself?鈥 After the interview, he emails to add: 鈥淢y hope is that anyone from my sort of background has the chance to fulfil their potential whatever that may be. “However, I would describe myself as an 鈥榓wkward climber鈥 – detached from my roots and never quite at home where I鈥檝e ended up. You carry your history with you – I guess I鈥檝e learned to be more upfront about who I am as I鈥檝e got older.鈥 He was a big champion of the National Tutoring Programme. 鈥淚t was great the government listened. But I do think the actual delivery 鈥 has been a bit of a disaster.鈥 He still thinks tutoring is a good way to address some of the education gaps caused by the pandemic, however. He is feeling particularly optimistic about the impact of a programme at Exeter that trains undergraduates to provide 鈥渧ery high quality鈥 tutoring to disadvantaged 11 and 12-year-olds at local schools. 鈥淲e鈥檙e doing a trial right now. Loads of other universities are interested in it, the government鈥檚 interested in it. My hope is that we will have a national programme like this, where whichever university campus you go to, there will be an opportunity to do tutoring for local schools.鈥 Tutors could be paid in module credits, or the programme could be funded from university access budgets or pupil premium, he says. 鈥淭he challenge for me is to come up with programmes that don鈥檛 cost that much, because there鈥檚 not going to be much money around in the next decade.鈥