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Increase in parent prosecutions over unauthorised absences
EB News: 10/04/2017 - 12:50
Statistics provided by the Ministry of Justice show that more than 100 parents are being prosecuted per school day for children being absent from school without permission.
The figures show that the number of people taken to court for unauthorised absences has increased by nearly two-thirds in four years, with nearly 20,000 people prosecuted annually, The Telegraph has reported.
Seventy-five percent of those which were found guilty were handed fines, 26 were jailed and 1,041 were given community sentences, figures for 2014-15 show.
In addition to this, the Cystic Fibrosis Holiday Fund, a group which raises money for children with the life-limiting illness, has said that parents who take their sick children out of school during term time have also been prosecuted.
The figures mark a 61 per cent increase since 2011, when Michael Gove, the then Education Secretary, vowed to curb the number of unauthorised absences in primary schools.
Nearly two thirds of Initial Teacher Training providers believe that teachers are not currently prepared to meet the government’s ambition to raise the complexity threshold for SEND pupils entering mainstream schools.
England’s councils are warning of a "ticking time bomb" in the special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) system, with new data showing deficits that could bankrupt local authorities within three years.
The regulations have been set following a second consultation and detailed collaborative working with organisations and people across deaf and hearing communities.
The Education Committee has published a letter to the Secretary of State for Education asking for more detail about the Department for Education’s work on developing its SEND reforms.