Headteachers should pick up absent children from home, says Education Secretary Gillian Keegan
Headteachers should drive to the homes of pupils who are absent from school and pick them up, Education Secretary Gillian Keegan believes.
She claimed that headteachers âhave a dutyâ to collect children with post-pandemic poor attendance at school now âa crisisâ.
And she insisted that she would âpick them up myselfâ when asked how she would cope with absent pupils, with 125,000 students missing more classes than they are going to.
Speaking to Sky News, Ms Keegan said: âThey [headteachers] do have a duty. We all have to play our part. Sometimes you have to go [to the home] or sometimes you have to text the parent in the morning. Sometimes you just have to do whatever is possible.
âThatâs not what we want headteachers doing all of their days. But to be honest, right now, if that works to get somebody in school, itâs worth it. Iâd go pick them up myself if I could.â
Earlier this year, the Childrenâs Commissioner said a âhugeâ number of children are playing truant on Fridays, as persistent absence continues to soar in the wake of the pandemic.
Almost 100,000 children were identified as absent from classrooms completely in 2021-22, according to local authorities.
According to the Government, that means they are not registered at a school and are not receiving suitable education otherwise than at a school.
More than 1.7 million pupils, 24.2 per cent of all children, in England were persistenly absent by missing 10 per cent or more of their sessions in Autumn 2022/23.
And 125,000 pupils missed 50 per cent or more sessions in Autumn 2022/23, 1.7 per cent of all pupils, according to Government statistics.
Asked if the government should make a register of missing pupils mandatory, Mrs Keegan said: âItâs something that my fellow MPs are very concerned about.
âI donât have the exact date because there is a parliamentary process we have to go through, but we do intend to put it on a statutory footing and we will do that as soon as the parliamentary time allows.â
The Government insists it is tackling student absences in the worst-affected areas, with a pilot scheme of attendance hubs and mentors to work with families to drive down rates of absence.
Nine new attendance hub leads are due to support up to 600 primary schools in England, with Ms Keegan adamant that the new school year will see a push go get absent children back into classrooms.
âWe know statistically that if children start school in September, they are more likely to stay in school.
âSo weâve got a window of opportunity where weâre really trying to bring together mentors, attendance hubs, local authorities, schools, and families to work to get children back into school and to reduce the barriers.â