Three men sitting at a table in a council committee room at Camden Town Hall.
Director of education and inclusion Vikram Hansrani (centre) Chris Roberts (left) and Cllr Marcus Boyland, cabinet member for best start for children and families (right). Photo: Camden Council webcast.

The number of pupils missing at least one in 10 school lessons in Camden is higher than the national average, Camden Council has said.

Recent data from a Town Hall report revealed that while attendance levels had climbed back from since their 2022-23 low-point, repeated absences are still a serious concern and have a way to go to return to pre-pandemic rates.

At a meeting of the Children, Schools and Families scrutiny committee on Monday 11 November, councillors pored over the striking statistics.

โ€œThe actual numbers are horrifying,โ€ Cllr Patricia Leman said, pointing to the 1,505 primary schoolchildren classed as persistently absent.

โ€œGiven what we know about the importance of early years, I want us to ask, โ€˜Who are they, and what more should we be doing to get them into school on a regular basis?’โ€

Illness is the largest single reason for pupilsโ€™ non-attendance — accounting for more than half of all absences in 2022-23, the report stated.

Vikram Hansrani, director of education and inclusion, highlighted the particular risk of children with special educational needs and disabilities (Send) missing their lessons.

Children with education, health and care plans (EHCPs) have a 35 percent rate of persistent absence nationwide, compared to 36 per cent in the borough.

EHCPs are provided to young people with complex special needs who need more support or resources than their school or educational settingโ€™s standard offer.

Last month, a council inquiry into Send support across the borough revealed โ€œgrowing discontentโ€ with a system plagued by financial pressure and familiesโ€™ frustration.

โ€œWe absolutely recognise that these are figures that we need to tackle and ensure families and schools feel supported in meeting the needs of children,โ€ Hansrani said.

โ€œNationally and regionally, we know of the challenges regarding ensuring school inclusivity. We recognise the lack of appropriate support is in direct correlation with lack of attendance.

โ€œSome children are struggling to attend due to inadequate support in schools, failure to meet their needs in mainstream schools, which can of course result in increased stress and anxiety.โ€

Camden has invested an additional ยฃ1.3mn in its Send and inclusion team to improve the support offer available to schools.

This year, the council ran a capital grant funding round for schools, and awardedย  ยฃ2.5mn to 28 schools in grants to โ€œenable them to make changes to their buildings and spaces to improve inclusionโ€, the report added.

While above the national average, the boroughโ€™s attendance figures reflect a wider trend of rising school absences in the aftermath of the Covid pandemic restrictions.

In March, data from the Department for Education (DfE) showed record levels of pupils missing schools for long periods, with 150,000 children at state schools classed as โ€œseverely absentโ€ in 2022-23.

This was 30,000 more than the year before, and 150 percent higher rate than in 2018-19, before the pandemic.

New statutory guidance from the DfE was updated this year, alongside new government regulations which change how schools keep attendance registers and serve fixed penalty notices over absences.

The departmentโ€™s new national framework requires schools to consider referring for a penalty notice if a pupil misses five days within a 10-week period.

Chris Roberts, senior adviser for safeguarding and inclusion at Camden Learning, said there was no single reason why children were absent, but that measures were being taken to improve attendance.

โ€œDeveloping family hubs could strengthen support that goes round in schools, so we can improve and streamline access to early help. Thatโ€™s work in progress.โ€

The council has employed three School Inclusion Support Officers (SISO) to provide Camden schools with guidance and resources to tackle poor attendance.

โ€œEach Camden school now has a named SISO visiting the school at least once a term, but more regularly for schools with the highest challenge,โ€ the report stated.

A parental text messaging campaign in partnership with some schools is also being trialled.

Roberts also raised the importance of mentoring programs, working in schools, and addressing childrenโ€™s wellbeing and sense of belonging.

โ€œIf there was one silver bullet that we could just fire, we would do that,โ€ he said.

Camden Council, Children, Schools and Families Scrutiny Committee, Monday, 11 November 2024.

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