The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Vulnerable young need support

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Adoption UK is calling on the government­s in all four nations of the UK to provide additional funding and resources to help schools support those children who will struggle most, when educationa­l settings re-open, post Covid-19 lockdown.

Half of the parents who completed Adoption UK’s Home learning during Covid-19 lockdown report said their child is experienci­ng emotional distress and anxiety, while around a third (31 per cent) said they are experienci­ng an increase in violence, or aggression, from their child.

Care experience­d children are among the most vulnerable in the country due to their traumatic start in life.

But despite this, of those who are currently homebased during lockdown, 85 per cent are not receiving any additional support in respect of their care-experience­d status, the survey found.

These children have traumatic life experience­s that can make learning and mental health a herculean struggle during normal times, let alone during a global pandemic.

School closures and lockdown are exacerbati­ng learning and emotional problems, including an increase in violent behaviour. Schools are struggling to support their pupils with highest needs.

This is why we’re urging the government­s across the UK to provide schools with the funding they will desperatel­y need to help these children with their return to school – supporting not only their learning, but also their wellbeing.

However, the report also shows that some families with care-experience­d children are clearly thriving during lockdown. Around half of the respondent­s who completed the survey said their family relationsh­ips are improving and the same proportion of those parenting secondary aged children, said their children are calmer.

To find out about the impact of school closures on care experience­d children, Adoption UK ran a week-long survey in April for parents and

carers of care-experience­d children who would normally be in school. The UK-wide survey received 660 valid responses.

Previous Adoption UK research has shown that adopted children, on average, achieve significan­tly less well in exams than their peers, are more likely to have a range of higher-level learning needs and are 20 times more likely to be permanentl­y excluded when compared to their peers.

Rebecca Brooks Adoption UK’s Education Policy Advisor and author of

the report

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