
Schools reward pupils with iPads and bikes for turning up to lessons
Schools are giving pupils iPads and bicycles as a reward for turning up to lessons, a report has found.
The National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER) found schoolchildren are receiving incentives including pizza parties, school trips and prize draws as headteachers try to tackle high absence rates.
Earlier this month, it emerged pupils are missing an extra 4.7 million school days every term after the pandemic caused truancy rates to soar.
A record number of pupils are missing more than half of lessons, Department for Education statistics revealed last week.
The report, based on interviews with staff and pupils at nine secondary schools and survey responses from 600 secondary teachers, said schools that combined reward with sanctions had seen 'higher pupil engagement' with attendance policies as children felt motivated to attend.
Incentives in schools for high attendance included prize draws – with rewards such as bikes and iPads – and pizza parties.
In some schools, pupils who did not attend regularly were banned from attending the Year 11 prom or trips.
The report advised headteachers to pursue 'individualised' approaches to improve attendance.
This could include ensuring that attendance and behaviour policies 'prioritise encouragement and support over sanctions,' it added.
The study suggests illness, mental health issues were partly to blame but some parents were choosing to take their children with them on holiday during term-time.
Prioritise 'encouraging'
Matt Walker, NFER senior research manager and co-author of the report, said: 'Attendance is strongly linked to educational outcomes, so it's concerning that absence rates remain high.
'The study responses suggest schools should consider prioritising encouraging and individualised approaches in addition to punitive sanctions.'
Paul Whiteman, general secretary at school leaders' union NAHT, said: 'These findings echo what school leaders tell us about the severe limitations of parental fines in improving pupil attendance.
'Absence most often reflects issues beyond the school gate, like mental health challenges and poverty, and clearly identifying and being able to support families to address these issues is far more effective.'
He added: 'If the link between absence and term-time holidays is to be broken, the only sustainable solution is government action to prevent travel firms unfairly hiking prices during school holidays.'
Hashtags

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


The Guardian
2 days ago
- The Guardian
Free school meal expansion in England will benefit fewer than claimed, IFS says
The expansion of free school meals will initially benefit far fewer children in England than claimed, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies, as data shows more than one in four at state schools already receive free lunches. The figures from the Department for Education's annual school census show that 25.7% of all pupils now receive free school meals (FSM), up by more than a percentage point compared with last year and nearly double the 13.6% in 2017. The record of nearly 2.2 million children is an increase of 77,700 since January 2024. The figures come as Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, announced expanded FSM eligibility from September 2026, allowing all children from households receiving universal credit benefits to receive free lunches. Currently those with a net earned household income of below £7,400 a year are eligible. While poverty campaigners and teaching unions welcomed Phillipson's announcement, the IFS said the expansion would take several years to affect levels of child poverty. The IFS said in the long run it would lift 100,000 children out of poverty but 'in the short run, both the costs and the benefits of this policy are likely to be much smaller', because of the high proportion who already receive FSM. Christine Farquharson, associate director at IFS, said: 'Transitional protections introduced in 2018 have substantially increased the number of children receiving free school meals today. So in the short run, today's announcement will both cost considerably less, around £250m a year, and benefit considerably fewer pupils [than the government's estimate of 500,000]. This also means that today's announcement will not see anything like 100,000 children lifted out of poverty next year.' The previous government allowed transition arrangements in 2018, during the introduction of universal credit, to protect children receiving FSM and extend their eligibility. The transition ended in April this year, and would eventually have led to fewer children receiving FSM. The IFS said: 'The ultimate impact of these transitional protections is that many more children are currently receiving free school meals than would otherwise be the case. This makes the short-run costs of expanding eligibility lower, but also means that fewer families will benefit on day one.' Tammy Campbell of the Education Policy Institute noted that schools would not receive additional pupil premium funding for each child on FSM under the new extension. The funding, which ranges from £1,000 to £2,600 per pupil, will still be paid under the existing criteria including the £7,400 household income cap. 'There does not appear to be a clear rationale from government as to why the new free school meal eligibility criteria will not be reflected in pupil premium eligibility. The government is clear that these children are growing up in difficult circumstances. As such, they are more likely to have lower attainment and benefit from additional support in school,' Campbell said. Phillipson also said the government would review school food standards. Speaking to the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, she said school food had not been looked at 'for a very long time' and that the government wanted to 'make sure that the food that's being served is healthy and nutritious'. Henry Dimbleby, the restaurateur who chaired the last school food review in 2013, said a fresh review was overdue as some schools were not following existing standards. Campaigners have called for government guidance to encourage consumption of fruit, vegetables, and legumes and less use of processed meats.


North Wales Chronicle
23-05-2025
- North Wales Chronicle
Specialist teams to tackle post-pandemic school speech therapy backlog
It is hoped earlier targeted support will help those who struggle to talk and understand words before problems escalate. More than 40,000 children had been waiting 12 weeks or more for speech and language therapy as of June 2024, the Department for Education said. A lack of early identification can have a devastating impact on children's social skills, attendance, and academic performance. The Government has backed the Early Language Support for Every Child (Elsec) programme with £3.4 million funding this year, which it said will benefit up to 20,000 more children. Early intervention is particularly important for children with special educational needs and disabilities (Send), as numbers have skyrocketed from 1.3 million in 2020 to 1.67 million in 2024 – with one in four of these children requiring extra help with speech and language. Minister for School Standards Catherine McKinnell said: 'When challenges with speech and language go unnoticed, it can have a devastating impact on children's attainment, attendance, social abilities and future life chances. 'Elsec is turning this around for so many pupils – and particularly those with Send – helping them find their voice and thrive at school and with their friends and family. 'This type of approach is exactly what we want to see in a reformed Send system that delivers the support children need at the earliest stage and restores parents' trust in a system which has let them down for too long.' Steve Jamieson, chief executive of the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists, said: 'We're delighted that the Department for Education and NHS England will fund the Early Language Support for Every Child programme until March 2026. 'It has shown that when speech and language therapists, therapy support workers and education staff work together, they can identify children's needs earlier and put timely support in place.'


The Independent
23-05-2025
- The Independent
Specialist teams to tackle post-pandemic school speech therapy backlog
The Government will deploy specialist teams to primary schools to tackle the backlog of children waiting for speech and language therapy since the pandemic. It is hoped earlier targeted support will help those who struggle to talk and understand words before problems escalate. More than 40,000 children had been waiting 12 weeks or more for speech and language therapy as of June 2024, the Department for Education said. A lack of early identification can have a devastating impact on children's social skills, attendance, and academic performance. The Government has backed the Early Language Support for Every Child (Elsec) programme with £3.4 million funding this year, which it said will benefit up to 20,000 more children. Early intervention is particularly important for children with special educational needs and disabilities (Send), as numbers have skyrocketed from 1.3 million in 2020 to 1.67 million in 2024 – with one in four of these children requiring extra help with speech and language. Minister for School Standards Catherine McKinnell said: 'When challenges with speech and language go unnoticed, it can have a devastating impact on children's attainment, attendance, social abilities and future life chances. 'Elsec is turning this around for so many pupils – and particularly those with Send – helping them find their voice and thrive at school and with their friends and family. 'This type of approach is exactly what we want to see in a reformed Send system that delivers the support children need at the earliest stage and restores parents' trust in a system which has let them down for too long.' Steve Jamieson, chief executive of the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists, said: 'We're delighted that the Department for Education and NHS England will fund the Early Language Support for Every Child programme until March 2026. 'It has shown that when speech and language therapists, therapy support workers and education staff work together, they can identify children's needs earlier and put timely support in place.'