School Truancy On The Rise With Average Of 62,000 Pupils Skipping Classes Each Day

Posted: 28/03/2012 10:51 Updated: 28/03/2012 10:51   PA

Truancy

Rising numbers of pupils are skipping school without permission, official figures showed today.

Statistics published by the Department for Education reveal that the truancy rate rose to 1.1% in 2010/11, up from 1% the year before.

It means that around 62,000 youngsters in primary, secondary and special schools missed sessions without permission on a typical day last year, through truancy, family holidays, illness and other reasons, an analysis of the data suggests.

Today's figures show that primary age pupils missed 0.7% of sessions due to "unauthorised absence" in the 2010/11 school year, the same as the year before.

And secondary school students missed 1.4% of half days, also the same as 2009/10.

The statistics also show that nearly 400,000 youngsters were considered "persistently absent" last year, because they missed at least a month of schooling.

Schools Minister Nick Gibb said the impact of missing this much time on a pupil's achievement should not be underestimated.

"The effect that poor attendance at school can have on a child's education can be permanent and damaging. Children who attend school regularly are four times more likely to achieve five or more good GCSEs, including English and Maths, than those who are persistently absent."

Mr Gibb said that Charlie Taylor, the Government's behaviour tsar, was conducting a review of attendance in schools.

The figures show that authorised absence fell to 4.7% in 2010/11 from 5% the year before.

And the overall absence rate dropped to 5.8% from 6%.

It means that more than a million pupils missed a half day or more of school each week in 2010/11.

Family holidays during term time accounted for 9.5% of absences, a rise from 9.3% the previous year.

Illness remains the main reason for absence, accounting for 58.7% of time missed.

The DfE's data also shows that rising numbers of parents are being issued with fines because their child was failing to attend school.

In total, 32,641 penalty notices were issued in 2010/11, up from 25,657 the year before.

Of these, 7,902 went unpaid.

The statistics come on the same day that a review into last summer's riots cited poor parenting, a sense of hopelessness among young people, no clear path to work, reoffending and a lack of confidence in the police as key reasons behind the violence.

The report, by an independent panel, found up to 15,000 people, most aged under 24, actively took part in the riots, with "countless more bystanders observing".

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ccraiglamont
Sometimes funny, other times...not!
06:22 AM on 03/29/2012
My son went from a really good nursery into a state primary school and immediately he lost interest in spelling, numbers and reading. His reasons were: ''School is boring', 'they say the same thing every day', 'they don't listen to the boys, just the girls' and my own personal favourite, "They don't explain things enough". He is only 5 years old!!! Is this the precedent for his future education?
Thankfully both myself and his Mam keep him busy with projects at home and encourage him to write little 'post it' type notes to each other to stimulate his literacy skills and imagination, coupled with using every day objects to help him understand basic Maths and Arithmetic he is getting by with our help.
05:23 PM on 03/28/2012
Bring back the cane.And give those truant playing kids a good thrashing.It didn't do me any harm and I grew up with a good education and have led a respectful life.
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mmartini54
Roll on 2015!
10:53 PM on 03/28/2012
I think others should be the judge of whether it did you any harm. If you think 'thrashing' people is OK I would suggest the harm has already been done.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Norman Mitchison
04:57 PM on 03/28/2012
The charismatic and enthralling teaching methods could`nt have anything to do with it, could they........
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mmartini54
Roll on 2015!
05:28 PM on 03/28/2012
No, I think that's an oversimplification. My teachers at school 40 years back were MUCH worse than many of them now, trust me.
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freedom1947
San Juan River Fishin'
04:32 PM on 03/28/2012
These kids don't realize what they are doing to themselves. There is no excuse for putting yourself in a position of having no future.
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mmartini54
Roll on 2015!
05:33 PM on 03/28/2012
They have no stake in this country, these kids, and they know it. They know they can't compete, they know there'sno jobs to walk into, no apprenticeships etc. All they've got is their own sub culture - cheap cider, drugs and other cheap means of oblivion.

I'd probably want to top myself if I was born into it too. It would help if we had some politicians who really really cared - like passionately cared. But that quality from our leaders went west years ago - if it was ever there in the first place.

Now - bring on the 'hang 'em and birch 'em brigade. There's one due along any minute.
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freedom1947
San Juan River Fishin'
05:48 PM on 03/28/2012
That quality didn't land on americas shores as you can tell by our republican and bagger society. Teabagging meant something totally different to us 234 years ago.
04:28 PM on 03/28/2012
part of the problem is that it is the parents who are fined etc for this. its time that action was also taken against the kids. i know families where they have tried everything to get the kid into school each day. one father pulled the boy from bed and dragged him to school, result a phone call to childline and visit from the SS . the social worker informed the father that if he `brutalised `the boy (15) in that manner again they would prosecute him and remove the younger children. they even gave the boy an out of hours number to ring if he felt threatened.
i have spoken to education welfare workers who told me that this was common the SS always take the side of the child and will support them in not attending school.
04:04 PM on 03/28/2012
No Jobs, a failing economy, mass unemployment and a country which values "smoke and Mirror" Con artists in the City of London above Doctors Nurses and Engineers. What incentive is there to study?
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bigshaunsace
principles are all about circumstances......
03:56 PM on 03/28/2012
my god if skipping ever becomes an olympic event we are bound to win every time...........
05:03 PM on 03/28/2012
Yep, 62, 000 being taught to skip each day, it should help stop the little dears becoming obese.
01:57 PM on 03/28/2012
All schools (state or otherwise) should be boarding from the age of 9. This would stop truancy and education levels should soar. It would provide more jobs and there should be no need for benefits to be paid to parents except perhaps during school holidays. There would be the added advantage of boarding school discipline for pupils and hopefully, behaviour would improve. Many children with poor parenting and bad home life would benefit greatly from the social responsibility that a good boarding school provides.
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mmartini54
Roll on 2015!
05:36 PM on 03/28/2012
Why yes! Good idea! Let the State take over all aspects of our lives - after all, it worked in Soviet Russia, didn't it?

Oh no I forgot - it would be for the plebs, wouldn't it? Those feckless wasters deserve all they get...
10:11 PM on 03/28/2012
No need for the sarcasm. The so-called upper classes have sent their children to boarding schools for aeons. I did say state and all other schools, including private. It does work for most children - not all. But it would put all education on a higher level. A boarding school concentrates minds without the distractions of outside pressures. It could be paid for by the saving on state benefits and impose discipline where there was none. So why shouldn't the "plebs" get the advantages that better off families have had for generations?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ben Wilson
01:29 PM on 03/28/2012
While I'll write plenty off as lazy kids who want to skive and get high, my best friend and youngest brothers were truants and I feel sure when I say it was the schools fault. Because they were kind to challenge authority and because they weren't academically inclined the school, also my school, alienated them, and for the most part it could have been resolved by changing the teachers they had. Both had teachers they liked, respected and would work hard under. Others they just didnt want to listen to. With my brother they simply refused to change his tutor, because apparantly my brother was sexist and didn;t respect female authority. When in actual fact it was because she joined in the jokes that my brother was on steroids and had become and animal after taking up boxing and losing 5 stone! It was the hardest thing he has ever done showing amazing commitment and it turned into a joke by one too many teachers for his liking, and they drove him out 3 months before his GCSEs.
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mmartini54
Roll on 2015!
01:18 PM on 03/28/2012
Yeah, of course it's school's fault, like the price of chips and Mrs T's dementia. It's all the school's fault. Fine 'em, the feckless ne'er do wells. Fine the schools, 'til the pips sqeak.
Fine 'em, until they beg for mercy. Always the school's fault. The riots, the crime, the lack of citizenship, the lack of morality, rubbish school leavers not fit to shine shoes - all the school's fault.

Happy? Now, let's move on.
11:24 AM on 03/28/2012
When my daughter (14yrs old) tells me what they learn in school and when I see the content of lessons and some of the staff...I wonder if the kids are stimulated enough despite all the talk schools have been dumbed down...I am 56 and think some of the content in school is boring, unexciting, and not demanding enough, when i complain at times they say its the curriculum, but at times I think its the teacher input and maybe to do with teacher training. I try to keep my Daughter focused on her school work even if secretly I think its not good enough for her brain, as she is a highly regarded student and has a good attitude to school. but I worry about it, and think that maybe other countries are better at education than here. In countries where you have to pay for it the kids are all eager to learn. Maybe also that has something to do with apathy here, all i know is I think education here could be a whole lot better
04:31 PM on 03/28/2012
i know where you are coming from, far to many lessons are to easy and are unlike any thing that was taught years ago. My daughter has been studying history , all they have done is the 20th Century, mainly the civil rights movement in America. she and her friends have had hardly any teaching of British History. in geography it is all about climate change and further properganda of the myths around it. again they have limited knowledge of countries, major mountain ranges cities climate, rivers etc.
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mmartini54
Roll on 2015!
05:38 PM on 03/28/2012
"all i know is I think education here could be a whole lot better "

....so could the banks, the government and the media.