The Guardian Australia

Senate to investigat­e growing trend of ‘school refusal’ after Covid pandemic classroom disruption­s

- Josh Butler

The Senate will investigat­e the emerging trend of “school refusal” – a phenomenon experts say is linked to distress or separation anxiety and is on the rise since the lockdowns and classroom closures of the Covid pandemic.

The announceme­nt follows recent reporting by the Guardian on the trend, which has been identified by mental health organisati­ons and education advocates as a deep reluctance to attend class.

A subject of concern for youth mental health organisati­ons such as ReachOut and Headspace, the issue will be investigat­ed by parliament’s education committee after the Senate backed a motion from the Greens schools spokespers­on, Senator Penny Allman-Payne.

“It’s distinct from truancy, and much deeper than that,” said AllmanPayn­e.

“Many children experience genuine and severe emotional distress when they’re required to attend school and will refuse to go, a phenomenon on the rise since the Covid pandemic.”

Megan O’Connell, honorary senior fellow at the Melbourne graduate school of education, told Guardian Australia last month that data “points to nearly 100,000 children not in education and many more only tangential­ly attached and not attending regularly”.

Organisati­ons such as ReachOut and Headspace have published resources for parents.

“School refusal is different to ‘wagging’ or ‘jigging’ because it stems from a teen’s anxiety about school,” ReachOut said on its website. “They might be worried about their school work, interactin­g with other kids, dealing with teachers, playing sports or being away from their family.”

Sign up for our free morning newsletter and afternoon email to get your daily news roundup

Headspace said a number of underlying factors could be at play including anxiety, household problems like parents’ separation, transition­ing from primary to secondary school, or bullying.

“Young people might appear to be feeling ill or unhappy the morning before school with a desire to stay home,” the youth mental health organisati­on’s website stated. “They might have an emotional reaction at the idea of leaving for school in the morning.”

Allman-Payne’s motion, which was supported by the Senate, called on the education and employment references committee to investigat­e “the national trend of school refusal or ‘School Can’t’ – as distinct from truancy – that is affecting primary and secondary schoolage children, who are unable to attend school regularly or on a consistent basis”.

The committee will look into the increasing rate of school refusal since the pandemic, how the trend is affecting students and their families, the increasing load on schools and service providers supporting those students, and how state and federal department­s are addressing “this growing school refusal challenge”.

The committee will report back in March 2023.

“School refusal is a growing problem for many school-age children who are unable to attend school due to extreme mental distress, neurodiver­gence, or other factors,” AllmanPayn­e said.

“This has dramatic impacts on not only the education and wellbeing of these children, but also on the families and carers whose lives are often turned upside down.”

Allman-Payne encouraged all affected parents or carers to make submission­s to the inquiry.

ReachOut CEO, Ashley de Silva, said he welcomed the inquiry.

“School refusal is an important problem for the Senate to be looking into as it can have a serious impact on students’ learning in the long term. This inquiry is timely as parents that use our service tell us that school refusal is of increasing concern to them,” he told Guardian Australia.

 ?? Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP ?? The motion from Greens schools spokespers­on, Penny Allman-Payne, for the education committee to investigat­e school refusal was backed in the Senate.
Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP The motion from Greens schools spokespers­on, Penny Allman-Payne, for the education committee to investigat­e school refusal was backed in the Senate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia