Are immigrants dragging Slough down?
Slough is often cited as an example of a town struggling to cope with the strain of increased migration, notably on public services. Yet an excellent article by David Rose in the Observer paints a very different picture.
The town is booming, and while public services have encountered some difficulties, migrants are not - as opponents of immigration claim - dragging down standards. On the contrary:
At GCSE last year, Slough pupils achieved 56.5 per cent grades A* to C, the 10th highest score of any education authority nationally and more than 10 percentage points higher than the English average. The town also has one of the lowest rates of student exclusion. The underlying lesson, Pyper said, is that, with careful planning and targeted provision for migrants' special needs, children who arrive not speaking English can end up as positive assets.
The headmaster of a local secondary school remarks that while foreign students start at a disadvantage,
once they learn English, they fly. You get into a virtuous circle, because teachers get much quicker feedback from the work they put in, the warm feeling that comes with sense of having made a difference. Foreign children have improved our results, and one consequence is that their numbers have now slightly dropped - because the white British parents who live close to the school want their children to come here again.

