Students choosing less diverse range of subjects at post-16 than they did two decades ago, new research finds

Press Release

Wednesday 14 August 2024


Post-16 students are studying a narrower range of subjects than 20 years ago, which could limit their future education and career options, according to a new NFER report commissioned by the British Academy.

Ahead of tomorrow’s A-level results, and in light of the government’s recently announced curriculum review, the report, ‘Subject choice trends in post-16 education in England: Investigating subject choice over the past 20 years’, shows a sharp reduction in the range of subjects chosen by students since 2015/16 when AS- and A-level qualifications were separated.

This separation may have led to fewer students studying humanities subjects like languages, English and history. The research shows that while 56 per cent of AS- or A-level students studied a humanities subject in 2015/16, only 38 per cent of students studied one in 2021/22.

The research also reveals students are increasingly choosing all of their AS-and A-levels from a single subject group - for example, only taking social sciences subjects, or only taking Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) subjects. Between 2015/16 and 2021/22, the proportion of students taking AS or A-levels from a single subject group, increased from 21 per cent to 36 per cent.

The subject choices available to students have also narrowed over the past two decades. While almost all post-16 education providers still offer some form of study in the arts, humanities, social sciences and STEM, most individual subjects appear to have declined in availability.

This is particularly stark in the case of modern foreign languages where the proportion of providers offering French AS or A-level has fallen in almost every year since 2009/10, from 78 per cent of providers to 53 per cent in 2021/22. The decline in availability of subjects could be down to provider choice or a decline in student demand.

The analysis also finds a young person’s background, environment and gender plays a key role in influencing their subject choices. For example, female students are significantly more likely to study an arts, humanities and social sciences AS- or A-level and less likely to study STEM.

NFER Senior Economist and report lead author, Michael Scott, said:

"Students’ post-16 education choices matter. They affect both their short-term learning outcomes, such as the skills they develop, and their long-term outcomes, including wellbeing. Young people are studying a narrower range of subjects, which is probably due, at least in part, to reforms introduced over the last two decades.

“It is critical that future reforms to the post-16 landscape carefully consider possible impacts on the nature and the range of subjects that students choose.”

Dr Molly Morgan Jones, Director of Policy at the British Academy, said:

"This new report is a foundational piece of policy work for the British Academy and our SHAPE Observatory, which shows a particular decline in humanities and arts subjects in post-16 education. Failure to address this decline will have knock-on effects, not only for these subjects in UK universities but also on the skills young people take out into the workforce and the wider world.

“Higher education and research are under strain, and the humanities and arts are bearing the brunt of many departmental closures. Breadth and balance should be at the heart of any future post-16 curriculum and should not be negatively impacted by any future reforms. The school curriculum should be interconnected and equitable, allowing and encouraging all students from all backgrounds to study a range of disciplines. Our students’ skills, and our societal growth, depend on it.”

The report also finds: 

  • A significant decline in the proportion of AS- and A-level students studying a three-way combination of subject groups (e.g. combining a STEM, social science and humanities subject). For example, the number of students combining biology, English Literature and psychology – a popular three-way subject combination – dropped by three-quarters between 2015/16 and 2021/22. This suggests that young people are increasingly choosing narrower pathways, which may limit their future education and career options.
  • The decline in take-up of humanities since 2015/16 can be seen in most individual humanities subjects. Around a fifth of all AS/A-level students took English Literature in 2015/16. This declined to 11 per cent of students in 2021/22. The proportion of students taking history also dropped in the same timeframe, from 21 per cent to 15 per cent.
  • Arts subjects have seen a significant shift over the last two decades. Take-up in arts subjects at AS-/A-levels has been in decline since the early 2010s. Art students have increasingly opted to take other forms of Level 3 qualifications over A-levels since at least 2007/08.
  • Take-up of social sciences has been relatively stable over the past 20 years. In 2003/04, 62 per cent of AS/A-level students took a social science subject, compared to 63 per cent in 2021/22.
  • Whilst characteristics are associated with subject choice, there is also variation among related subjects. For example, female students are significantly more likely to study social sciences such as psychology and sociology, whereas male students tend to study social sciences like business studies, economics and geography.