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Petitions and activism

Please sign our flexischooling petition!

378 replies

flexischoolingUK · 01/06/2025 22:17

Flexischooling is an arrangement where a child of compulsory school age is registered at school full time, but the school agrees the child can be educated at home for part of the week. Flexischooling is a full time education, just like full time school or full time home education. This is a legal option in England, Scotland and Wales, but isn’t very well known (even in schools).

In England and Wales, flexischooling, if agreed, is marked as Code C, authorised absence. The trouble with this is that code C still
affects the school’s attendance data, which can put schools off agreeing. Before 2019, Code B (educated offsite) was allowed and this code did not negatively impact attendance data.

In December 2024, the head of Ofsted, Sir Martyn Oliver, voiced the concern in his end of year report, that we have no way of knowing how many children are being flexischooled, as Code C is a generic authorised absence code, and it is impossible to differentiate between flexischooling absences and other authorised absences.

The Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill proposes that flexischooling be managed by LAs. This seems like an inefficient and costly duplication of oversight and data retention, as flexischooling children are already registered at school full time, seen in school on a weekly basis, and schools are already recording attendance of flexischooling pupils on a twice daily basis!

We believe our proposal makes more sense logistically and financially. For schools to continue to manage flexischooling arrangements, but for a specific flexischooling code to be used (Code F) giving the government quantifiable data on the number of flexischooling children. Ideally, this code would not impact attendance data, as flexischooling pupils are legally receiving a full time education and it seems unnecessary for schools to be penalised for agreeing to a flexischooling arrangement in the best interests of a child. This is the current system in Scotland, flexischooling has no negative impact on attendance data.

We are aiming to reach 10,000 signatures to get a response from the government, but more than 10,000 would be a fantastic testament to the interest in flexischooling. We currently have at least 1 signature in all but 5 constituencies in the whole of the UK! It would be absolutely amazing to be able to say that every constituency in the UK had signed.

We are currently missing a signature in Nah-Eileanan an lar in Scotland, and 4 constituencies in Northern Ireland:

Mid Ulster - Mr Cathal Mallaghan MP

East Antrim - Rt Hon Sammy Wilson MP

Lagan Valley - Sorcha Eastwood MP

Belfast West - Paul Maskey MP

Whilst this petition isn’t directly aimed at Northern Ireland, Scotland or Wales, signatures from these countries do count and the petition data will be available even after the petition ends, and could be used to demonstrate the high levels of interest in flexischooling in these countries.

And of course, if every single constituency signs, that’s a statement everyone in the UK can use, that this petition demonstrates the universal support for flexischooling in the UK, with every single constituency having signed! 🤞

Please consider taking 2 minutes to sign and verify your email (please check your junk/spam folder) as unverified emails do not count.

Thank you!

Happy to answer any question regarding flexischooling 🙂

Flexischooling petition link

Petition: Introduce a distinct attendance code for flexischooling (Code F).

We want the Department for Education to introduce a new attendance code for flexischooling (Code F). We want this code to act in a similar way to code B (educated off site) in that it would not negatively impact attendance data, recognising that the ch...

https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/708358

OP posts:
flexischoolingUK · 23/06/2025 12:52

Scratchybaby · 23/06/2025 09:05

Wow, I saw this petition on the SEND boards and was curious about the reaction you said you received here. This is why my autistic son is being home educated. For a child with SEND, we found the education system an extremely hostile, inflexible and unforgiving place.

The impact school has had on our family - EBSA met with threats of fines and prosecution and me having to leave my job to accommodate the school's constantly changing start and finish times on a part-time timetable they kept promising was temporary, removing my ability to plan long-term (i.e. a formalised flexischooling arrangement) - has been like a bomb went off in our lives. We were much better off before he started school, and we're piecing our lives back together now that we've removed him from the utterly broken SEND system with an approach to home ed that just about works for him and the whole family.

I will happily sign this. Flexischooling could have been a great alternative for us, but it was never allowed on the table. If the Government makes it harder to home educate (via the Children's Wellbeing Bill) it will be even more important for children with SEND to have flexischooling as a bit of respite from a system that seems, consciously or not, designed to traumatise them and their families.

@ScratchybabyI am so sorry to hear what you’ve experienced 😞 thank you for agreeing to sign. I am currently writing to the DfE and members of the House of Lords about this situation. Would you mind if I shared your comment as an anonymous testimony along with my letter? I have quite a few testimonies, but the more the merrier! I think your story perfectly illustrates some of the key issues in education for children with SEND and how flexischooling arrangements could help children stay in school, rather than feel forced into full-time home education.

To share anonymously, I’d need to put “Parent of a (e.g 7 year old), (region e.g North East)

Of you’d be happy for me to share, would you mind sharing the age and region?

I really want to help get parents’ voices heard!
Thank you

OP posts:
Crazyworldmum · 23/06/2025 13:04

The posts here are so nasty . Flexi schooling has been around for quite a while . This is just a change in how it’s marked so schools don’t suffer with statistics .
This post seems to be full of weird people who are simply of a mindset that “ if my child can’t have it so none can yours “ .
Nobody posting seems to even understand how flexi schooling works .

Scratchybaby · 23/06/2025 14:31

flexischoolingUK · 23/06/2025 12:52

@ScratchybabyI am so sorry to hear what you’ve experienced 😞 thank you for agreeing to sign. I am currently writing to the DfE and members of the House of Lords about this situation. Would you mind if I shared your comment as an anonymous testimony along with my letter? I have quite a few testimonies, but the more the merrier! I think your story perfectly illustrates some of the key issues in education for children with SEND and how flexischooling arrangements could help children stay in school, rather than feel forced into full-time home education.

To share anonymously, I’d need to put “Parent of a (e.g 7 year old), (region e.g North East)

Of you’d be happy for me to share, would you mind sharing the age and region?

I really want to help get parents’ voices heard!
Thank you

Happy to - 6yo in the West Midlands. We do also have an EHCP and the horror stories we have related to that are for another petition I guess ;-)

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