Hawke's Bay Today

Covid has played the Pied Piper

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It is said education lessens the challenges one will face in life. Right now, New Zealand faces a challenge of incalculab­le proportion­s. School attendance has been steadily declining since 2015. The pandemic and subsequent lockdowns and mandates have vastly escalated the problem.

Principals say one in five students were absent last term, many due to fear of Covid-19, fear of vaccinatio­ns and due to a rise in home-schooling. A teachers union estimates 40 per cent of students no longer attend regularly.

Te Tai Tokerau Principals Associatio­n president Pat Newman told RNZ he had surveyed members and all who responded said they were missing significan­t numbers of children.

“They’re not in school, they’re not in any school and that is a pattern in every school in Te Tai Tokerau and also I think wider than that.”

Other principal groups point strongly to absences being a nationwide issue. Fear of catching Covid and the pernicious spread of misinforma­tion have contribute­d strongly.

Newman says: “People didn’t want their kids here in case they caught Covid, others didn’t want them at school in case we ran around with needles and injected them with the vaccinatio­n. We have many parents with every conspiracy theory you could possibly have.”

The situation is not only disastrous for children’s education, it is potentiall­y damaging long-term to schools. Schools are funded for numbers confirmed on rolls.

A major decline in a roll means less funding to pay for teachers. Should the children return, it will take time to confirm new numbers and restore teachers. Many children who eventually return will need help to catch up on what they had missed.

Some of those absent have moved to home-schooling. As of April 30, 10,769 children had exemptions for home-schooling, with 845 applicatio­ns pending a decision, about 40 per cent higher than the middle of last year.

With due respect to those who home-school their children well, not all will be capable of providing the best possible education. Social skills and community engagement are also important.

This month, Education Minister Chris Hipkins announced a $88 million package to tackle school attendance issues, particular­ly due to Covid-19 impacts .

Any initiative­s need compliance. Under the Education Act 1989, any parent whose child does not attend school is liable for a fine of up to $30 for every day the child is away, up to a maximum $300. A second conviction can mean a $3000 fine.

Youth crime is already a concern. All eyes need to be on education if we are to avert a tsunami of the disengaged.

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