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Truancy powers flawed

Posted: 24 March 2004 | Subscribe Online


Britain's biggest parent support charity has warned the government that there are not enough good quality parent support services in the UK to underpin parenting contracts and orders which have come into force for truancy or school exclusion.

Parentline Plus which runs a 24-hour government-funded help-line for parents has stated that parent support services are not good or extensive enough to meet the requirements of the new legislation, or to help parents at an earlier stage.

Schools and local education authorities can now ask parents of truants and children with behaviour problems to sign parenting contracts with the school, agreeing to attend parenting courses.
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If parents won't co-operate local education authorities can apply to magistrate's courts for civil parenting orders if a child has been excluded twice for misbehaviour.

The parent would be required to attend a parenting course or some other form of counselling or guidance, which could include a residential programme.

Councils and schools will also have powers to issue fixed penalty fines of £100 to parents whose children miss school without good reason.

The government has also said it will pilot fixed penalty fines for 16 and 17 year olds and eventually introduce fines for under-16s, which parents will have to pay.
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Parentline Plus says that the "implicitly punitive" measures risk further alienating parents and create great mistrust between parents and schools, as well as placing extra demands on an "already stretched and under-resourced service".

LEAs are implementing the measures gradually. Parentline Plus is calling for consultation with parents and guaranteed quality assurance of services before implementation.


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