Yorkshire Post

Truancy rates high despite rise in fines

- CLAIRE WILDE CRIME CORRESPOND­ENT Email: claire.wilde@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @ClaireWild­eYP

EDUCATION: Yorkshire’s truancy rates remain the highest in the country, despite an increasing number of parents being fined for failing to send their children to school.

Now Yorkshire MP Emma Hardy, who sits on the Education Select Committee, has called for a Government inquiry into why the problem is so severe.

YORKSHIRE’S TRUANCY rates remain the highest in the country, despite an increasing number of parents being fined for failing to send their children to school.

Now a Yorkshire MP has called for a Government inquiry into why the problem is so severe.

Emma Hardy, who sits on the Education Select Committee and whose Hull West and Hessle constituen­cy is one of the country’s worst-performing areas for school attendance, said: “These statistics are indeed shocking and we really need to look for the reasons behind the absence and ask why these children are missing school.”

The former teacher said schools were increasing­ly using so-called ‘off-rolling’, a practice in which pupils are told not to come to school but not formally excluded.

She said this, coupled with an “exclusive focus on exams”, could be contributi­ng to a rise in truancy figures.

She said: “The Government needs to do a proper investigat­ion into the reasons that truancy is so high and how schools can support students to stay in and enjoy going to school.”

Fellow select committee member and Colne Valley MP Thelma Walker said persistent absence from school was an issue often found in areas with lower social mobility.

She said this echoed a report published on Monday by the Children’s Commission­er for England Anne Longfield, which warned that young people in Northern communitie­s are being left behind by their Southern counterpar­ts as they face a “double whammy of entrenched deprivatio­n and poor schools”.

Mrs Walker said: “The North desperatel­y needs more investment from Government for education, infrastruc­ture and local authoritie­s, and this funding could be used to supply more family outreach workers who could help tackle these persistent absences.”

A spokesman for the National Associatio­n of Head Teachers said there were many complex reasons why truancy levels might be stubbornly high in Yorkshire.

He said: “Persistent non-attendance is a real worry because where are those children on those days? Are they being cared for? Are they learning anything? Are they safe? Are they being fed?”

At local-authority level, Doncaster had England’s third-highest rate of persistent absences. About one in nine primary school pupils and one in five secondary school pupils missed at least a tenth of lessons in the 2016/17 school year.

A spokesman for Doncaster Council said this was “disappoint­ing” but that the authority was working hard to resolve the problem and had recently developed a new attendance strategy.

Barnsley had England’s eighthhigh­est rate, with Hull ninth.

Hull City Council said it was working hard with schools to promote good attendance.

Local councils can impose fines of £60 on parents who fail to ensure their children’s attendance at school, rising to £120 if not paid within 21 days.

The number of Yorkshire parents fined for failing to send their children to school rose by two per cent to 26,008 in the last academic year.

A spokeswoma­n for the Department for Education, which published the figures, said local authoritie­s had been given the power to fine parents because “the rules on term-time absences are clear”.

We really need to ask why these children are missing school. Emma Hardy MP, a member of the Education Select Committee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom