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Parents to be asked to solve school attendance crisis

827 replies

noblegiraffe · 07/01/2024 11:44

There is an article in the Times about the current school attendance crisis. It cannot be overstated how awful the attendance crisis is. Pupils, particularly disadvantaged pupils, are staying away from school in much larger numbers, and for more days than before covid.

It says that lockdowns broke the contract between parents and schools which said that school attendance was compulsory.

It blames parents for keeping their children home when they have a minor illness or are slightly anxious about school.

It quotes Bridget Phillipson, Shadow Education Secretary as saying "If I were secretary of state, I’d be sending a very clear message to parents that every day at school matters, and that irresponsible parents who don’t care about sending their kids to school are harming other kids’ life chances, not just their own"

(Whereas current Education Secretary Gillian) "Keegan will expand a programme that gives children skipping school an attendance mentor who could drive or walk youngsters from their home to school in the morning or negotiate with head teachers on their behalf. She said: “Persistent absence is a hangover from the pandemic affecting schools around the world. Schools and the government cannot do this alone.

“Families play a big part in attendance and parents have a legal duty to make sure their children are at school. I know it can be hard to get children out of the door, especially when they are feeling a bit anxious or have a mild cough or cold, so we must rebuild the social contract between parents and schools and make sure everyone plays their part.”

While lockdowns are brought up, what is not mentioned is the utter state schools were in between lockdowns and after lockdowns. Children were being supervised in halls rather than being taught due to lack of teachers who were ill (and this is still happening now due to inability to recruit). Lack of teachers meaning that kids get endless cover which can be largely a waste of time. Children who are anxious about attending school are expected to get on with it while teachers who are unable to cope with the poor behaviour of students are signed off with stress. The experience of children in schools during and since covid can be extraordinarily shit.

Attendance is much lower in pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds. Child poverty is not mentioned - I was reading about a child who couldn't attend school because her mother needed to use the one pair of shoes they shared. Other children are needed to look after younger siblings while parents work because they can't afford childcare. How will this be solved by sending a car around?

But we also know that schools in disadvantaged areas are more likely to struggle to hire staff. What is the point in a child attending school when they don't have teachers? How will Keegan and Phillipson argue that one?

This bit is the most worrying:

"A Labour government, Phillipson said, would place more emphasis on absenteeism as part of the Ofsted inspection framework, with schools compelled to produce an annual report on attendance, off-rolling (removing a pupil without using a permanent exclusion) and safeguarding. Schools are required to submit weekly attendance records to the Department for Education but absenteeism does not have its own Ofsted criteria, instead falling under a broader category of “behaviour and attitudes”.
These reports would affect the Ofsted rating given to schools, which would also take into account the progress they have made in shrinking the attainment gap between disadvantaged pupils and their more affluent peers"

Linking an Ofsted grading to attendance will just doom schools in disadvantaged areas to low Ofsted grades at a time when Ofsted had just started to recognise that grading a school based on disadvantage was a bad idea.

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/1d7eb40d-c4c4-4dcc-85ea-ad6f62c65b9c?shareToken=6c4b865c0c1b8626f2761a5ad733b608

Bridget Phillipson: Parents must save lockdown’s lost generation

The shadow education secretary takes aim at absenteeism as a poll reveals that one in four parents don’t think their child has to go to school each day

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/1d7eb40d-c4c4-4dcc-85ea-ad6f62c65b9c?shareToken=6c4b865c0c1b8626f2761a5ad733b608

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EveSix · 18/03/2024 23:33

Mamma246, schools and LAs gatekeep the ECHP process -I always recommend parents apply for themselves, as this has a much greater likelihood to be successful, at least in my LA.

@unwrittenredbook , thank you for your posts. They mean the world to me as I'm one of those parents made ill with exhaustion, my own career (in education!) in jeopardy, trying to advocate for my SEN child in a mainstream setting, my child threatened with fines and prosecution for me as a result of EBSA following years of failure to implement recommendations in EHCP. Keep doing your important work and, where possible, let those poor parents know you know ‐priceless.

Mamma246 · 19/03/2024 06:27

It’s not gatekeeping if you can apply yourself surely? But it is an Education Health Care Plan, so they have to have some kind of input. I think parents see a lot of behaviour at home and assume that’s what their child is like at school, when very often isn’t the case. And yes masking, but masking is just controlling behaviour, so of course younger children are tired when they get home, which can cause different behaviour. Frequently a perceived SEND is actually trauma, which needs counselling/SEMH support, not an EHCP. Working with the school is the most helpful thing as it provides your children with more people looking after them. I think people’s own perceived experiences of (probably one secondary) teachers at school affect their view of all of them. Being a pain in the arse to your kid’s school doesn’t get you anywhere. I agree with persistent if you have to be because schools are so busy, but don’t be aggressive. Also doesn’t teach your kids anything positive. I know it can frustrating and you can feel the school doesn’t believe you, but if they don’t see the behaviour you do, they can't just lie about it for your benefit.

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