17/09/2003

'Modest' inroads made into reducing truancy

Figures released today have revealed that truancy rates for school children registering a "modest improvement".

The headline rate of unauthorised absence declined, with around 700 fewer pupils playing truant each day. Up to 133 of 150 local education authorities have also reported an improvement in attendance at secondary level.

The government have hailed the figures as the equivalent of almost an entire secondary school back in education daily.

Education Minister Ivan Lewis said that the rates were "impressive" and the government's £470 million Behaviour and Attendance Strategy will now "come into its own from this term".

He added: "The causes of truancy are complex and challenging, and today's figures show a welcome change in absence rates that have remained largely unchanged since records began in 1994.

"We are delivering the first sustained national strategy to deal with the problem, and I am hopeful that our Behaviour and Attendance Strategy will contribute to a greater improvement in attendance rates for the current academic year. But parents and schools must join with us to make sure that every day in school counts."

The three-year £470 million Behaviour and Attendance Strategy began in the academic year 2002/03, offering targeted assistance to local education authorities.

The Anti-Social Behaviour Bill currently before Parliament contains further measures to drive down truancy with penalty notices and parenting contracts to offer both sanction and support to parents of persistent truants.

(gmcg)

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