Education Welfare Service must get to grips with school absence
11 Jun 2014 03:52 PM
An Assembly report, published today by the
Public Accounts Committee, has found that the Education Welfare Service (EWS)
is not on top of the problem of non-attendance at
school.
The Report found that 16,000
pupils here miss almost six weeks of school, yet schools had not made referrals
to the Education Welfare Service for support. The Report also found that the
local unauthorised absence record was double that reported in England. There
were particular problems for the most vulnerable young people, including pupils
from social deprived backgrounds, Traveller children and children in
care.
Chairperson of the Committee,
Michaela Boyle MLA said: "Education is crucial for our young people and we
are very concerned that they are not taking advantage of their opportunities.
We know that there are complex reasons why a child might be absent from school
and it is important that the education system gets to grips with tackling these
issues. This is the only way that the system will manage to break the vicious
cycle of underachievement of the most vulnerable groups of our
society."
The Report found that many of
those who miss school are not contacted by the EWS and therefore do not get the
help they need to return to education. The Report recommends that the EWS put
into place a mechanism to identify pupils requiring help at the earliest
possible opportunity.
The Chairperson concluded:
"The Committee accepts that there is no simple solution to resolving these
issues. However, our Report found that there were examples of schools that have
managed to deal with the issue of non-attendance through collaboration with
parents and communities, despite very challenging
circumstances.
"We believe that more can
be done through better collaboration and the development of a coherent
attendance strategy. These mechanisms should be put into place
urgently."
Notes to
Editors:
- The Committee report,
entitled Improving Pupil Attendance: Follow-Up
Report, is based on attendance statistics for 2011/12 collected from all
schools via the school census in October each year.
- Overall, pupil attendance has
improved marginally since statistics were first collated in 2007-08; however,
it is concerning that the level of unauthorised absence has increased from 27%
in 2007-08 to 33% in 2011-12 and is double that reported in England. The annual
cost of this lost education is estimated to be in the region of £22
million.
- The Education Welfare Service is
a specialist education support service which seeks to help young people of
compulsory school age and their families get the best out of the education
system. The service is provided by the Education and Library Boards and it
employs 134 Education Welfare Officers at a cost of £8.8 million each
year. A school should refer a pupil to the EWS when a pupil’s attendance
is cause for concern or when attendance drops below 85%, if
appropriate.