Ofsted should hold councils to account for stalling school attendance to ensure a 鈥渞azor-sharp focus鈥 on the issue, the children鈥檚 commissioner has said. The Parliamentary education committee was also told today schools are misusing attendance codes to avoid being 鈥渃aught out鈥 doing 鈥渕anaged moves鈥. Witnesses also warned better-off parents are abusing the system of fines for term-time holidays, with some councils reporting receiving cheques from rule-breakers before penalties are even issued. Attendees at the session, the first of the committee鈥檚 persistence absence inquiry, included children鈥檚 commissioner Dame Rachel de Souza. With power comes 鈥榓ccountability鈥 While Covid 鈥渉ad an impact鈥 on attendance, de Souza told MPs that of 1.6 million children persistently absent in the autumn and spring terms of 2021-22, 818,000 were not off because of illness. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 very serious,鈥 she added. Lucy Nethsingha, the leader of Cambridgeshire County Council and a Local Government Association spokesperson on education, told MPs councils needed the power to direct schools to take children. de Souza said she accepted the 鈥減oint about placing children, and I think that really needs to be strengthened鈥, adding that councils should be 鈥渃hampions of our vulnerable children and all our children鈥. 鈥淪o I think obviously there is a request here for resource, but with that should come accountability too. 鈥淚 would like to see Ofsted actually inspecting attendance as part of local authority children鈥檚 services inspections. Then there might be a bit more of a razor-sharp focus on it.鈥 Such inspections already look at whether 鈥渦rgent action is taken if children are missing from education or if their attendance reduce鈥. But de Souza wants Ofsted to go further. A called for a stronger focus on attendance in school inspections, and consideration of new inspections looking specifically at attendance approaches across a whole area. Fears 鈥楤-codes鈥 used to send children home de Souza said she was 鈥減articularly concerned鈥 about schools鈥 use of the 鈥淏鈥 attendance code, which are supposed to be used to record authorised absence when pupils are at another education setting. Alice Wilcock 鈥淭his code is not meant to be used for kids who are at home, working. Now I am seeing great inconsistency of use of the B-code, and I think that is a simple place we could look at.鈥 The Centre for Social Justice has been trying to 鈥渕ap鈥 where children are if they are not in school, but has run into difficulties tracking the use of B-codes. Head of education Alice Wilcock warned the codes were 鈥渞ecorded as an authorised absence but we鈥檝e heard of some settings using that now to send children home, to work from home, saying they have been B-coded, when actually they鈥檙e not in an education setting they鈥檙e just at home鈥. 鈥淲e鈥檝e also heard of B-coding being used for managed moves, such that schools now scared about being caught-out for managed moves are saying 鈥榳e鈥檒l B-code it rather than put it down as a dual registration鈥.鈥 Well-off parents stomach fines for cheaper holidays MPs were also told better-off parents are abusing the system of fines for term-time holidays, with some councils reporting receiving cheques from rule-breakers before penalties are even issued. de Souza said 鈥渨ell-off鈥 families would look at the prospect of a 拢200 absence fine and consider the 鈥渢rade-off鈥 of a 拢600 discount for travelling outside school holidays. She even suggested former education secretary Michael Gove could help put pressure on holiday firms that ramp up prices out of term time. 鈥淚 wish we could change the industry. I do think we should be putting some moral pressure on there, and maybe we ought to ask a cabinet member who鈥檚 passionately interested in it like Mr Gove to try and do that for us. That would be useful.鈥 Wilcock said CSJ had 鈥渉eard of some local authorities that receive cheques in the post from parents鈥. 鈥淭hey knew they were going to be fined, and so before they got a fixed penalty notice, they went 鈥榟ere鈥檚 my cheque鈥. And you can understand why. 拢60 for a fine. It鈥檚 much cheaper.鈥 Home ed checks delay exploited for term-time breaks Wilcock also warned that parents who had become 鈥渕ore knowledgeable鈥 about home education were using delays in council checks to avoid scrutiny for term-time holidays, though she said the evidence was only anecdotal. 鈥淏ecause that [home educated] population is growing, local authorities are struggling to do the necessary checks in a timely fashion. 鈥淧arents can pull their children out of school, go on an extended holiday and go back into school before anybody鈥檚 been able to do the checks on them.鈥 de Souza also revealed she had asked large multi-academy trusts to provide attendance data for analysis of the periods before and after Covid, revealing a 鈥渉uge amount of Friday absence, that wasn鈥檛 there before鈥. 鈥淧arents are at home on Fridays. And we鈥檝e had evidence from kids, 鈥榳ell, mum and dad are at home, stay at home鈥. We鈥檙e seeing in the post-Covid world slightly different attitudes.鈥 Mentoring pilot doesn鈥檛 go far enough DfE data for the autumn and spring terms of 2021-22 also showed more than 110,000 pupils were 鈥渟everely鈥 absent 鈥 meaning they missed at least half of their time in school. This is up from 57,000 pre-pandemic. Wilcock said CSJ had called for 鈥2,000 attendance mentors who could support 60,000 children every single year, that鈥檚 half of our total severely-absent children鈥. The government has launched a pilot which will start in Middlesbrough and then expand to five council areas. Wilcock said this was 鈥渞eally promising, but ultimately the scale of need is much greater. 鈥淚 think the tender suggests that about 1,600 children will be supported, but obviously 118,000 children are severely-absent and we need to get support to them now.鈥 She also called for a greater focus on severely-absent pupils, pointing out the government鈥檚 new live attendance tracker does not include data on those missing 50 per cent or more sessions.
ChangeNeeded 8 March 2023 As a parent I would like to give an alternative perspective here. I believe there is an overemphasis on attendance and that the inflexible system does not account for the many varied situations that families find themselves in over the many years that their child(ren) are at school. I have experienced the negative effects of the overemphasis on attendance. We have had the fact that my son has been off sick more than Ofsted deem acceptable used against us when we legitimately requested time off to deal with a family mental health crisis in another county following a bereavement. We were told by the school that our options were to leave the school and home educate or send our son to a totally new school local to tje family we were staying with instead for the time we had requested off. Also regarding the point that “well off parents” are abusing the system – surely those who are ‘well-off’ can presumably afford to go on holiday during the more expensive peak periods and it may in fact be the ‘less well off’ families that make the choice to ‘stomach the fine’ in order to pay the cheaper holiday price – as otherwise the cost may be prohibitive and prevent them from having a holiday. Rather than blame parents, as mentioned here – YES why don’t the government use their authority to prevent holiday companies from raising prices during school holidays! It’s ludicrous thst this is allowed. I’m not sure where the Ofsted standard of 90% attendance comes from and how you can have a ‘one size fits all’ when there are so many differing factors in every family’s life. There is so much publicity about mental health now yet the system continues to put unreasonable pressure on people. There is an obsession with attendance that causes genuine cases of need for absence to be frowned upon/dismissed. Workplaces have become much more flexible and schools need to be forward thinking and realise that the world is changing and only by accommodating new ways of working and educating can we achieve a system that works for all involved.