
‘Crisis of school absenteeism' affecting poorer pupils the most, new data suggests
Pupils on free school meals are more than three times more likely to be absent without authorisation in every region outside the capital, new data for secondary schools suggests.
Data published by the Department for Education (DfE) shows that secondary students in the north of England are also more likely to miss school without permission than children in London or the Midlands.
The data has led experts to warn schools are facing a 'crisis of absenteeism' following the Covid pandemic, hitting the poorest pupils hardest.
Some 7.5 per cent of secondary school sessions, blocks of classes in the morning or afternoon, had a child eligible for free school meals absent without permission in Yorkshire and the Humber last term. This was 7.3 per cent in the North East of England and 6.5 per cent in the North West, compared to 4.2 per cent in London, and 5.4 per cent in the West Midlands.
For children who weren't eligible for free school meals, unauthorised absence rates dropped to just 2 per cent for the North East, 1.8 per cent in the North West, and 2.1 per cent in Yorkshire. In London, this was 1.7 per cent, data for the autumn 2024 term showed.
School absence rates have risen since the pandemic, and academics from the London School of Economics predict that they will remain above pre-Covid levels until those who began secondary school during the pandemic have left.
Professor of social mobility, Lee Elliot Major, at Exeter University, said: 'We are facing a crisis of school absenteeism. No matter what we do in education, if children aren't in the classroom, they're falling behind.
'Regional variations in attendance are closely tied to the levels of poverty beyond the school gates. Many children growing up in disadvantaged areas, where local job prospects are also limited, are more likely to miss school regularly, further limiting their future opportunities.
'A child on free school meals in Sunderland or Southport will be facing a completely different environment to one based in Stratford or Southwark - with many from families where generations have had poor experiences of schooling.'
He said trust and relationships needed to be 'rebuilt between schools and families' to encourage children back into the classroom.
Russell Hobby, chief executive of educational equality organisation Teach First, said: 'Once again we see that pupils from the poorest backgrounds, especially in the North of England, are the most likely to miss school.'
The new data comes as charities warn that they are seeing young people resort to self-harm and school refusal amid crippling academic pressures in the wake of Covid.
Praveena Pakium, from Step by Step, a Surrey-based charity, said: 'We are seeing more safeguarding alerts than before the pandemic. Children refusing to go to school also feels connected to the pandemic, with people being out of school for so long. It's not always easy to go back to how things were, and there is an increased anxiety. I think we've still got a lot of fallout from that time.'
She warned that 'young people are using self-harm as a coping mechanism' and they are seeing more children with increasingly complex mental health needs.
New polling by Parentkind for The Times showed that almost a third of children in the UK have refused to go to school at least once in the past year.
This adds up to an estimated 3.3 million children who declined to attend school for at least one day last year.
Ten per cent of these children, equivalent to 330,000 students, had missed two or more weeks of school, the poll suggested.
Martyna Lambon, from Aberdeen Foyer, a youth charity in Scotland, said they were also seeing more young people struggle to attend school post-Covid. She said: 'We forgot we left these kids behind after the pandemic. Nothing was normal for them growing up during that time, and now resilience is something they really struggle with.
'Some 16-and-17-year-olds appear to have lost all hope if they fail their final exams or leave school earlier. They no longer believe in themselves or their future, convinced they have no chance of achieving anything.'
Chief executive of EveryYouth Nick Connolly pointed to rising youth homelessness as having an impact on school attendance. He said: 'Students experiencing homelessness face even bigger challenges to their academic performance and are 7.5 times more likely to have reported frequent absences from school.'
Matt Garrod, at the Benjamin Foundation in East Anglia, a youth homelessness charity, said they are seeing 'more young people coming into their accommodation services with complex needs and with mental health challenges'.
A Department for Education spokesperson said: 'Tackling the epidemic of school absence is everyone's responsibility – government, schools, parents, and children – we need a national effort to get our kids back in the classroom.
'Persistent absence has improved this autumn term, with thanks to the hard work of schools and parents, but there are still far too many children missing school.
'This government inherited an absence crisis but we remain laser-focused on tackling the problem and its drivers – ensuring attendance remains a key focus of school inspections, providing access to mental health professionals to all schools, and reforming the SEND system, so we deliver on our Plan for Change and every child achieves thrives in school."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The National
7 hours ago
- The National
Rule-breaking mega farms in Scotland revealed as polluters told to pay
MEGA farms in Scotland, including some with more than a million animals, have repeatedly leaked excrement and failed to monitor contamination, putting humans, wildlife and the environment at risk, The Ferret can reveal. By failing to responsibly contain or dispose of slurry, wastewater and harmful air particles, these industrial-sized farms were responsible for 126 breaches of green regulations between May 2022 and November 2024. The rule-breaking is revealed in inspection reports compiled by the Scottish Environment Protection Agency (Sepa), which The Ferret obtained under Freedom of Information law. Campaigners and an MSP argued that polluters should face greater penalties for allowing more serious breaches to occur. Scotland's megafarms 'pollute rivers, degrade soils, fail to deliver nutritious food and drive biodiversity loss,' according to wildlife charity WWF. READ MORE: 'Completely unprecedented': BBC cuts live feed for Kneecap Glastonbury performance In reply, Sepa said intensive farms are 'regulated closely' and repeat rulebreakers face 'enforcement' from the environmental regulator. Farming sites that have the capacity for more than 40,000 poultry birds, or either 2000 pigs or 750 sows, must obtain a permit from Sepa and face inspections. Smaller operations, and beef and dairy farms, do not require such permissions, despite being major polluters, although they are subject to other rules. Some 114 intensive pig and poultry farms currently have permits and are collectively allowed to keep nearly 19 million birds and 109,000 pigs, according to Sepa's data. HOOK2SISTERS THE worst offending intensive farm company was Hook2Sisters (H2S). The Oxfordshire-based firm, which is permitted to keep nearly 7.5 million birds at its 19 Scottish sites, was responsible for more than a quarter of all intensive farm environmental breaches. At its poultry complex, near Eccles, Berwickshire, H2S polluted the environment with 'chicken litter and dirty water' in 2022, and was not treating surface water to remove pollutants. Around two years later, Sepa found that operators were failing to check whether the site was contaminating soil and groundwater. Polluted groundwater can threaten drinking water supplies, according to Sepa's English counterpart. No pollution monitoring was taking place at the H2S intensive farm near Balado, Kinross in 2022. In each of the two years that followed, the firm contaminated ground via cracked concrete at the site. Further monitoring failures were discovered at the H2S mega farm, near Meikleour, Perthshire, in 2023. More cracked flooring and a lack of drainage systems designed to prevent water pollution were found at its poultry complex near Broxburn, West Lothian, in both 2022 and 2024. The Broxburn site is allowed to hold nearly 1.3 million birds. (Image: Archant) At Balado, a 'significant build-up of dust and mud' had formed under the fans ventilating four chicken sheds in 2023. Poultry farm dust contains faeces and other pollutants, which can harm humans, according to a 2023 study published in the Science Of The Total Environment journal. At its Gogarbank poultry complex in western Edinburgh, dirty water was not being properly contained and 'waste material' and rubbish littered nearby woodland in 2022. H2S had also not adequately concreted the ground to stop pollution. An H2S spokesperson said: 'As of June 2025, we can confirm remedial action has been taken at all farms and all locations as listed are compliant. We remain committed to upholding the highest environmental standards and continuing to invest in our Scottish farming base.' The Ferret previously revealed that between 2015 and 2017, H2S sites at Alloa, Balado and Broxburn were among the biggest polluters of ammonia. The harmful gas combines with other pollutants in cities and creates a deadly form of air pollution called PM2.5. 2 Sisters Food Group, a separate entity which runs chicken abattoirs, also has a history of flouting Scotland's environmental regulations, as we have previously revealed. It has received millions of pounds in taxpayer subsidies from the Scottish Government. OTHER BREACHES FACTORY farms that flouted environmental rules included those run by PD Hook, which acts as a supplier to H2S and other firms. PD Hook's Helensfield Poultry Farm near Clackmannan, which houses 133,000 birds, failed to monitor soil and groundwater in 2022. Cracked concrete flooring was discovered at PD Hook's Mossbank Farm, near Cowdenbeath, in 2022. PD Hook said that this and all other environmental issues discovered by Sepa had since been resolved. At pig producer DW Argo's Ellismoss Farm near Kinellar, Aberdeenshire, which can hold up to 4277 pigs, slurry was found to be leaking into surface water in 2023 – an issue that Sepa officers had 'raised at several previous inspections'. DW Argo declined to comment. In 2022, Sepa found that Welsh poultry firm Annyalla Chicks allowed dirty wastewater to flow on to land neighbouring its Addinstone complex, near Earlston. Operators of the site – which can house up to 382,000 chickens – put soil and groundwater at risk due to the 'exceptionally poor condition' of concrete surfaces, and allowed dust to accumulate beneath chicken shed ventilation fans. The farm also lacked a suitable way to store dead chickens and the liquid waste produced by their corpses. In 2024, Sepa found that York-based Warrendale Eggs Ltd was releasing dust and particulate matter – air pollution which is harmful to humans – via exhaust fans from its chicken sheds at Swinton Poultry Farm near Greenriggs, Duns. Sepa also found a blocked and broken drain, ground surfaces in poor condition and large cracks in a drainage channel, both of which risked pollution to soil and groundwater. Poor drainage and cracked and worn surfaces were also found in 2022 at Warrendale's Cottage Wood farm near Earlston. Fragments of polystyrene were discovered in blocked drains on the site and in nearby water. Meanwhile, 'significant quantities of dust and feathers' had formed on fans, outside surfaces and nearby vegetation. CALL FOR POLLUTERS TO PAY CAMPAIGNERS and an opposition MSP argued that polluters should be made to pay for environmental breaches, or have public funds clawed back. Kirsty Tait, Scotland director of the Food, Farming and Countryside Commission, an independent charity, said: 'The challenges of avoidable pollution highlighted in this investigation are ones that citizens involved in The Food Conversation, the UK's largest public dialogue about food, want addressed. 'Notably, there was frustration from citizens in the Lothians about the lenient treatment of polluters, and support for making serious ecosystem damage a crime was high.' Tait added: 'Citizens want government and industry to be accountable for their actions and to protect people and planet.' Jenny Hawley, policy and advocacy manager at Plantlife, also called for Sepa to charge polluters 'for the devastation they are inflicting on our natural environment and to extend the permitting system to smaller poultry units and intensive beef and dairy farms'. She claimed that 'uncontrolled air and water pollution from this kind of intensive livestock farming is driving Scotland's wildlife ever-closer to the edge of extinction'. WWF Scotland branded the rise of intensive farming 'a warning sign that our food system is heading in the wrong direction'. 'We've built a system where the most harmful forms of agriculture are also the most profitable – megafarms that pollute rivers, degrade soils, fail to deliver nutritious food and drive biodiversity loss,' said Ruth Taylor, WWF's agriculture and land use policy manager. She added: 'What we urgently need to see is farming with nature, through nature-friendly methods that restore ecosystems, build resilience and ensure farmers stay profitable.' The Scottish Greens spokesperson for rural affairs, Ariane Burgess MSP, said: 'These industrial-scale operations, which cram millions of animals into confined spaces, are clearly failing in their responsibilities' 'The fact that these firms continue to ignore basic environmental protections while raking in taxpayer money is completely unacceptable. There must be consequences for those who break the rules, and that includes the removal of public funding and the suspension of operations until environmental practices are improved.' Sepa expects 'all regulated operators to understand their impact on the environment and to comply with their obligations in legislation, and conditions set out in authorisations'. 'Intensive agriculture is regulated closely due to the potential risks it poses to the environment,' said a spokesperson. 'Our experience is that most of those we regulate respond to our advice and guidance and come into compliance, preventing repeated patterns of behaviour. 'However, when necessary, we will escalate our enforcement response, and have served enforcement notices and final warning letters as required. This has already led to compliance being restored at some sites. 'All sites that are currently non-compliant are scheduled for inspections in 2025.' Every intensive farming company named in this article was asked to comment.


Metro
19 hours ago
- Metro
Rare new statue of black woman unveiled in London - who is she?
A rare new statue of a black woman who has been 'hidden in history' has been unveiled for Londoners to make wishes at. The statue of Mary Woolaston has been erected after it was found there were only three permanent statues of black women in London. She was said to be a 17th century woman in King's Cross, who kept a well with the ability to people's eyes. Now, made from St Bees sandstone and carved by Marcia Bennett-Male, the only black female stone carver in the UK, Mary has been brought back to he heart of London in Cowthorpe Community Gardens. Lead artist Gaylene Gould told Metro: 'There are glimpses of Mary in the history books, but some people still deny she exists. 'There is one argument suggesting she was actually a black cow, or a nun just wearing a habit, but we want to breathe life into her. 'But she now stands to represent working class women, particuarly those of colour, who have never had history written properly about her.' The statue has been placed in Cowthorpe, next to a stream which runs through a small community garden in the middle of high rises. Around her, the previously disused area has been transformed into a pleasure garden to try and create a space which Mary would have thrived in. 'As I was walking through the area, I just immediately knew, 'this is Mary's well',' Gaylene said. 'We want Londoners to be able to pause just for a moment, offer wishes, prayers.' The idea to create a statue of Mary has been in the back of Gaylene's mind for years. But after the Covid pandemic erupted and people were ordered to keep to a more solitary existence, plans were put into action. She said: 'All of a sudden there was a big threat to our survival, and people were without a community. 'But there were people who were voluntarily still trying to keep their areas alive and connected, such as gardeners and keepers. We want to honour them.' Funding to create the statue was granted by the Mayor of London's office who started a project to increase diversity in the public realm. It was commissioned in 2020 to highlight previously untold stories for London's diverse histories. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Why 'big hairy' Welsh miners led London Pride in 1985 MORE: Patient who threw bricks at paramedics and smashed ambulance avoids jail MORE: I'm a shopping writer and here's what I'm buying this week – from Berghaus to Skin Rocks


Scottish Sun
a day ago
- Scottish Sun
‘It's a miracle he survived', hillwalker plunges 160ft in horror sheer drop fall on Scots mountain
'Where he fell has almost certain fatal consequences. He was very lucky indeed' RESCUE MISSION 'It's a miracle he survived', hillwalker plunges 160ft in horror sheer drop fall on Scots mountain Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A HILLWALKER has baffled rescuers after miraculously surviving plunging more than 160 feet in Glen Coe. The man in his 30s fell from a precarious ledge over 1600 feet up an iconic Scottish mountain. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 The man in his 30s fell from a precarious ledge over 1600 feet up an iconic Scottish mountain Rescuers said he faced a sheer drop fall with 'almost certain fatal consequences'. The man was with a group on Gearr Aonach, the middle of the Three Sisters range in Glen Coe. But he fell in an area known as The Zig Zags last weekend. Five members of Glencoe Mountain Rescue Team were scrambled while another rescue was happening at the same time in Glen Etive – and what turned out to be the third in a day. 'He fell on a vertical drop of 164 feet,' said deputy team leader Brian Bathurst. 'It has become a particular accident blackspot – with three call outs recently to that same spot. It appears people are misjudging the junction. 'He hit a ledge on the way down and suffered multiple injuries and was in a critical condition. It is a miracle he survived. It is very rocky terrain. 'Where he fell has almost certain fatal consequences. He was very lucky indeed.' An Inverness-based coastguard search and rescue helicopter flew the walker to Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow. His condition is unknown but is no longer life threatening. Watch shock moment couple cheat death as they fall off 5,000ft mountain while taking risky shortcut to avoid queue The team was so short-handed that day that veteran rescuer Ronnie Rogers, who is in his 70s, helped out with the Glen Etive rescue involving a man who suffered broken ribs after falling into a burn. 'Knowing we were going to be short handed, Ronnie once again laced up his boots and raced into the Glen to help despite the fact that after 50 years he officially 'retired' from front line team duties in November 2022,' added Mr Bathurst. 'He is a legend. Since stepping back, Ronnie has helped with team callouts by calling team members on the phone to deploy them to incidents so was well aware that help was needed that day. 'We would like to wish all the casualties well in their recovery and as always a huge thank you to the helicopter crews and everyone else involved.'