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School Absenteeism and the Implementation of Truancy‐Related Penalty Notices

MING ZHANG

Principal Education Welfare Officer, Royal Borough of Kingston, Kingston upon Thames, UK

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First published: 15 November 2007
Cited by: 4
Correspondence
Ming Zhang
Royal Borough of Kingston
Learning and Children's Services
Guildhall 2
Kingston upon Thames KT1 1EU, UK
E‐mail:ming.zhang@rbk.kingston.gov.uk

Abstract

This paper derives from the author's recent research into disadvantaged children's access to compulsory education in England. Examining the national attendance strategies and practice, the author interrogates the current trend towards a more punitive approach to addressing the problem of school absenteeism while debating the issue of irresponsible parents in terms of parental responsibility. Using the data collected from 150 Local Education Authorities and a survey among Education Welfare managers, the research study reported in this paper measures the association between authorities' readiness to issue penalty notices and the change made in pupils' absence rates between 2004 and 2006. Presenting the findings of the research study, the author argues that truancy is a complex social and historical issue and that poor parenting is itself a symptom of several underlying social problems and the circle of disadvantage. Therefore, the findings of the study call for more efforts and measures to address the underlying social problems and to break the circle of disadvantage of the families that most truanting children come from.

Number of times cited: 4

  • , Risk Factors for School Dropout in a Sample of Juvenile Offenders, Frontiers in Psychology, 7, (2016).
  • , What it takes to keep children in school: a research review, Educational Review, 67, 4, (459), (2015).
  • , EVALUATION OF A TRUANCY DIVERSION PROGRAM AT NINE AT‐RISK MIDDLE SCHOOLS, Psychology in the Schools, 51, 7, (779-787), (2014).
  • , Solidarity and Reciprocity in the Social Investment State: What Can be Learned from the Case of Flemish School Allowances and Truancy?, Journal of Social Policy, 41, 04, (657), (2012).