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MP's to debate school holiday rules/fines on 24th February

394 replies

mummymeister · 21/02/2014 12:44

Please can I ask anyone who feels as strongly as I do to write to their MP and ask for the changes in the rules regarding school holidays to be reversed. there is a back bench debate at 4.30pm on the 24th February and it is really important to bring this issue to the fore. There have been so many stories on MN of people wanting a day for funeral, to attend a family event, to visit family abroad that I know if all of us affected or who feel strongly write in at least we will have tried.

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JugglingFromHereToThere · 26/02/2014 18:50

Fair enough lljkk and sorry to hear your DS is unhappy at school.

It's just annoying when people make a correlation between attendance and performance and assume it's 100% correlative without considering tha other factors may be at play. Especially those that should know better, such as politicians.
I feel they are often taking advantage of general ignorance in their use and misuse of stats.

lljkk · 26/02/2014 18:58

Juggling, I agree with all that, too.

Beechview · 26/02/2014 19:00

Tiggytape I'm saying that taking 2 weeks off doesn't make a difference.
If you're intelligent, you'll still do well, If you need extra support, you'll probably still need the same amount of support, not a whole lot more because you've effectively dropped a whole GCSE grade by taking 2 weeks off.

tiggytape · 26/02/2014 19:01

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IdRatherPlayHereWithAllTheMadM · 26/02/2014 19:11

Is that absence due to holidays or due to feckless parenting and children who are playing truant

The reason for absence does not appear to have any significant effect on outcomes.

Bullshit.

amimagic · 26/02/2014 19:29

Prh your statistics do not actually mean much. No way does 90% attendance at say, year 2 in primary school result in such a drop in GSCE results, and most people know this. Also, as per previous posts, attendance itselfmay not actually be the whole cause of these statistics.

There is a middle ground here. Make it apply to GSCE years maybe. Or allow up to 10 days every few years rather than every single year. I just wish people could get a bit of a break here, especially when life is blinking hard. These rules are making children's lives poorer.

prh47bridge · 26/02/2014 19:30

I'm saying that taking 2 weeks off doesn't make a difference

The research does not agree with you. Note the figures I posted earlier. There is a clear relationship between the amount of absence and GCSE grades. If a child misses 5% of school (the average figure) and also misses 2 weeks per year for a holiday their chances of getting 5 GCSEs at grades A*-C including Maths and English are roughly halved. There will be individuals who still perform well despite having poor attendance. There is, of course, no way of knowing how they would have performed if their attendance had been better.

IdRatherPlayHereWithAllTheMadM - I'm sorry you don't agree with the extensive research or the very clear statistics I posted previously. But I'm afraid the figures are clear. There is a direct relationship between the amount of absence and GCSE grades. The reasons behind that absence do not appear to make any difference. To go into a bit more detail, a child with feckless parents will generally get lower grades at GCSE than a child with parents who regard education as a priority. If both children miss 17 days school per year they will typically both end up with GCSEs one grade lower than would otherwise have been the case. The child with feckless parents will still get lower grades overall than the other child but both will be lower than they would have achieved without the absence.

prh47bridge · 26/02/2014 19:34

No way does 90% attendance at say, year 2 in primary school result in such a drop in GSCE results, and most people know this

The statistics are about attendance throughout a child's school life. Again, there is plenty of research to show that poor attendance in any single year, even if it is Y2, has an effect on education outcomes. Children who have 90% or lower attendance at primary school typically have worse attendance at secondary school. These are the children most likely to play truant.

Paintyfingers · 26/02/2014 19:39

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IdRatherPlayHereWithAllTheMadM · 26/02/2014 19:42

"Lies, damned lies, and statistics"

There must be massive flaws in these stats.

Its dangerous to rely on them.

IdRatherPlayHereWithAllTheMadM · 26/02/2014 19:45

Its such a load of tosh and rubbish.

Even when I was at primary school sat in a room lost and forgotten learning zilch. I was moved at 9 and a few years later was coming top at most subjects.

That's after pretty much no schooling. I could have been on a jaunt round the world for all the good sitting in that classroom did me.

amimagic · 26/02/2014 19:49

And where is the consideration for different types of education? After all, rigid predefined exam-based education is not the kind, and many parents highly prize the learning that their children gain from travel. But, it seems that amongst the financially poorer population, no choice is possible and parents cannot be given the credit to make a value judgement for their own children.

Anyone looking at my family would see that we highly prize education, are cultured and well-travelled by choice, and that we don't always subscribe to the majority view. My son has had term-time holdays nearly every year but is in the G&T stream and top of his year. I understand that this doesn't mean anything, but it does mean that I deeply resent being dictated to so strongly on something that affects our quality of life so badly.

lljkk · 26/02/2014 20:09

"90% of academic success is determined before a child starts school."
"Nature not nurture decides 75% of how well a child does in school."

I just made those numbers up, but they are the sort of numbers I've heard in recent years, about those factors and others. I really cannot believe that scattered holidays have a crucial impact.

One of a million links to say the same thing.

Paintyfingers · 26/02/2014 20:20

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lljkk · 26/02/2014 20:22

Ruddy excellent point, Painty.
Except the chronic don't-give-a-fig truants will still be themselves and still truanting. And all the social-emotional-hormonal-personal problems that cause most of child-teen underachievement haven't been solved, either.

but the govt can carry on, thinking they can control the impossible.

Paintyfingers · 26/02/2014 20:29

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Paintyfingers · 26/02/2014 20:40

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mummymeister · 26/02/2014 23:12

ahh yes paintyfingers but the great and powerful Gove can say hey look the figures for absence are down aren't I clever. he will have done bugger all to solve the real and deep seated problems and he knows it but he doesn't give a stuff. his only plan B is to stagger holidays. what an idiot. Christmas and Easter aren't movable and what happens when LEA/schools suggest say all of June off hmm. oh yes that's right Gove me lad what about the GCSE exams and A levels that are also fixed and the 1st March date and the 11+ and mocks. these cant be moved can they. there are just too many things fixed in the calendar that leads to very very little flexibility for schools to change dates. hands up who wants 6 weeks in Dec/Jan and 2 weeks in July or August? no one?

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prh47bridge · 27/02/2014 00:46

So if the stats are right, we should now be seeing a measurable national increase in performance

One year won't make much difference. The pupils being measured this year will only have been subject to the "new" policy for less than a year at the time they take their tests. If the research is correct it needs a sustained improvement over many years. As such there will be no step change in performance and it will be several years before there is any measurable effect from the current changes. However, if they are succeeding in their main target of reducing persistent absenteeism we should see a measurable fall in those figures more rapidly. But even that is some way off - we won't see the figures for the current academic year until May 2015 or thereabouts. And evidence of previous changes is that even that effect will be spread over several years.

he will have done bugger all to solve the real and deep seated problems

Depends what real, deep seated problems you want Gove to solve. He will almost certainly reduce absence. He will almost certainly reduce persistent absence, both in terms of the percentage of pupils who are persistent absentees and the average absence for such pupils. As for bringing down the cost of holidays during school holidays, no his changes won't have that effect. But he is by no means the only person to suggest staggered holidays. It was not him (or even an MP in his party) that suggested this in the debate this week. Despite facing similar obstacles a number of European countries operate staggered holidays without any apparent problems. By the way, the dates of mock exams are not fixed.

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