logo
The truancy time bomb threatening to blow up Britain's economy

The truancy time bomb threatening to blow up Britain's economy

Telegraph20-07-2025
Sam Sheedy thought he'd seen it all. Two decades of working in secondary schools had taught him just how resourceful children can be if they don't want to come to school.
But even he was surprised to discover how determined the truants were at Hanson Academy in Bradford.
By the time Sheedy took over as headteacher in 2023, he'd become used to catching teenagers trying to sneak out behind staff cars at lunchtime or climbing over the school gates.
Hanson even had the benefit of a 7ft perimeter fence that stretched around the campus. But it was no match for the pupils, who started digging tunnels to get out in Shawshank Redemption-style escapes.
During his first week, he walked the grounds, bag of concrete in tow, sealing up all the holes he had discovered. But less than a week later, fresh ones had appeared in their place.
'There were four tunnels under the fence, two were lined with plastic so they didn't get mud on their blazers,' he recalls. 'It was actually ingenious, but completely unsafe.'
The tunnels became emblematic of a school that already had a reputation for bad behaviour and truancy, churning through 20 different headteachers in almost as many years.
'It was the most broken school in the country,' says Andy Barnett, a director at Delta Academies Trust, which runs Hanson alongside more than 50 other schools.
At its worst moment, more than 60pc of Hanson's pupils were absent from school for the equivalent of a day every other week, while one in five were missing half their lessons each week – one of the worst rates in the country.
Sheedy has spent the past two years turning Hanson around. Attendance is climbing, while Ofsted handed the school its first ever 'Good' rating in April.
But years of trouble leave deep scars – and not just at Hanson.
School absence, suspensions and permanent exclusions across the country have soared since lockdown, with children and families becoming not just disengaged from school but society itself.
Department for Education (DfE) data show that in summer 2024, almost 173,000 pupils were absent from school more than they were present, equating to almost 2.5pc of England's total school population.
That's almost three times the number in autumn 2019, before lockdown.
It's a grim portent of the future. The Government's own analysis shows that children who skip school are up to four times more likely to be on benefits in adulthood. Absent pupils are more likely to end up unemployed, use drugs and commit crimes.
Even those that end up in a job are estimated to earn £10,000 less by the time they celebrate their 28th birthday compared to pupils with near-perfect attendance.
'Lost learning isn't just a classroom issue – it's a threat to our economy,' says Bridget Phillipson, the Education Secretary. 'Every missed school day damages our children's education and future earnings, weakening our future workforce.'
Labour must grip the problem before it metastasises into an economic disaster. Can they defuse this societal time bomb?
'A dangerous place to be'
To understand what must be done, the Education Secretary could do worse than look at what is happening in Bradford.
Sheedy spends a significant chunk of the school day walking the corridors at Hanson. There are 1,547 students enrolled here, and he claims to know most of their names.
Like an approachable drill sergeant, Sheedy monitors behaviour but is also on hand to help. On a recent July school day, he directs a girl to the first aid room after she complains about a swollen eye. A boy comes to tell him about his morning cleaning the gyms.
As friendly as Sheedy can be, he also has a steely side. His voice booms as he rebukes a group of loitering boys: 'Guys, what are you standing still for? Let's get walking!'
Other members of Hanson's senior leadership team patrol the building in hi-vis vests, making sure children are where they need to be.
It's two weeks before the summer holidays and the corridors are packed with students, a very different situation to when Sheedy first arrived.
'At any one point in the day there were 193 children truanting out of a cohort of 1,600,' he says. 'The amount of lost learning time was truly daunting.
'There'd be kids that would come in from other schools and just spend the day roaming around. Children would be going and sitting in local residents' gardens and having parties.
'It was a dangerous place to be, was the reality. Staff didn't want to come out of the classrooms and be in the corridors. It was not under control.'
While Hanson was among the worst in the country for absences, its problems were not unusual. More than one in five children missed the equivalent of one schoolday a fortnight last summer, with 1.6m pupils classed as 'persistently absent'.
That compares with roughly 900,000 before lockdown. Students are now missing an average of 14 days of school per year, up from an average of fewer than nine days in 2019. Unauthorised absence is driving the rise.
Rates of suspension and permanent exclusion have also continued to climb. Almost 11,000 children were permanently excluded from England's state schools last year. This is up 16pc from the previous year, with 'persistent disruptive behaviour' cited as the most common reason.
In addition, official data show that there were 955,000 suspensions in the 2023-24 academic year, up by more than a fifth compared with a year earlier.
The figures show almost 7,000 suspensions and 70 permanent exclusions were handed to pupils aged 'four and under' in the 2023-24 school year, more than three times pre-Covid levels.
In short, children are behaving worse than they were before the pandemic and skipping school altogether far more often.
Kiran Gill, chief executive of charity the Difference, blames lockdown.
'Work and school really changed during the pandemic, and that has changed people's feelings about them,' she says. 'Lots of young people – particularly small children – lost out on the social and emotional development of being in groups. And as a result, there is a lot of catching up to do.
'There's also a mistrust that's grown between parents and schools. School had been a constant in everybody's life, and there was a breaking of that taboo of not turning up. That mistrust, I think, is part of what's playing out today.'
Phillipson has described the school absence 'epidemic' as the symptom of a 'failure of society and state', blaming a breakdown of the 'precious relationship' between schools, families and communities for plummeting attendance.
'The absence epidemic is the canary in the coal mine for belonging in our country,' she warned last year.
Phillipson has warned of a 'casual' attitude towards attendance on Fridays, when many parents work from home. Ofsted has also said parents working from home since the pandemic has fuelled an increase in Friday truancy.
'I've made attendance a priority, and we've already made huge strides getting children back in the classroom with over 3m additional school days gained this year,' Phillipson says.
Progress, yes, but Sheedy believes the problems run deeper.
He says: 'Parents, carers, families and in reality some communities do not see education as that valuable because it didn't work for them. As a result of that, they think, 'well, school was a horrible experience for me, why am I going to force my kid to go when they don't want to?'
'That perpetuates throughout the rest of their lives because they turn up to a job and they can't pick up the skills because they haven't got the learning habits.'
Life on benefits
The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) has estimated that the total lifetime cost of exclusion is around £370,000 per young person when you count the cost of education, benefits, healthcare and criminal justice.
Policymakers and think tanks are increasingly drawing on an official database of employment outcomes for 39m people to figure out the impact of missing lessons.
The Longitudinal Education Outcomes (LEO) data shows pupils classified as 'persistently absent', with more than 10pc of lessons missed, were 2.7 times more likely to be claiming benefits in adulthood than pupils with a good attendance record. This rises to 4.2 times for pupils missing more than half the school year.
The DfE also found persistently absent pupils were 60pc less likely to be able to hold down a job for a year or more. For pupils who miss more than 50pc of lessons, the likelihood of maintaining steady employment decreases by 75pc.
There are many more similarly depressing stats. The Educational Policy Institute (EPI) shows that children who have been suspended from school just once are almost twice as likely to be claiming out of work or health benefits by the time they reach 24.
Many of these children will go on to be suspended repeatedly. Get more than 10 suspensions and they are five times more likely to be on welfare in adulthood.
Many of these payments do not require people to look for work, condemning many to a life on benefits.
Those who do find a job will still pay the price for their absences. A DfE study published this year found 15 and 16-year-olds who missed half their lessons earned on average £21,000 less than those who were hardly absent by the time they were 28.
The crisis in schools risks making the youth worklessness crisis worse at a time when close to 1m young people are already not in employment, education nor training (Neet).
The Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) estimates around 190,000 pupils will become Neets this parliament as a result of persistent absence, almost twice as many more than if absence rates had returned to pre-pandemic levels. The think tank believes this could ultimately cost the taxpayer £14bn.
Andy Cook, chief executive of the CSJ, says the surge in school absence has devastating consequences for the future.
'The Covid lockdowns broke the contract of trust between schools and parents, but the danger now is that absence is becoming entrenched as 'the norm',' he says. 'That isn't good enough.
'The consequences of so many kids missing so much school will only result in unfulfilled lives, fractured communities and spiralling costs to the taxpayer for picking up the pieces.'
A flagship report by the CSJ last year warned pandemic lockdowns had a 'catastrophic effect' on the nation's social fabric, with communities across the country left more isolated.
Cases of mental health problems among young people went from one in nine to nearly a quarter among the oldest children. Across the UK, 86pc more people sought help for addictions. Prisoners were locked up for as much as 22.5 hours a day.
Studies also show the stark relationship between school absence and crime. CSJ analysis shows that persistently absent pupils are more than three times as likely to commit an offence by the time they reach their 17th birthday than pupils fully attending school.
'Fraying' social contract
When Sheedy arrived at Hanson, he brought a firm hand to the school.
After pupils made a makeshift bridge out of a tree by leaning it over the perimeter fence, he cut the tree down. 'We got a chainsaw,' he says.
But getting tough with children will not go far in tackling the problem of poor attendance and outcomes, he says.
'Ultimately, you have to develop a positive relationship with the community you serve,' he says. 'If all you're going to do with a severely absent child is say 'you need to turn up otherwise you're going to get a consequence', they just won't turn up or they will turn up and cause problems.'
The headteacher has sought to build positive relationships with his students and find ways to make them want to come to school, rather than force them to. This includes offering gardening lessons for those who are interested.
'I enjoy school now,' says one student. 'I want to come in because I want to finish my garden.'
Sheedy has also worked hard to ensure pupils have no excuse to turn back when they reach the school gate.
Hanson made headlines in 2014 when the former headteacher suspended 150 pupils for not having the right uniform. Sheedy now has a room full of Hanson-branded jackets and trousers hanging on racks. The school also spent £340,000 on a new perimeter fence, meaning they could cut the £110,000-a-year they were spending on security guards.
Staff here have access to an array of data on their pupils. A green dot means that child made it into school today, while a red one signals the opposite.
Moira Wallace, who used to run the Social Exclusion Unit set up by Tony Blair in 1997, says DfE's data drive is making a huge difference to attendance and outcomes.
Wallace, now a fellow at the Institute for Government, says: 'The department is now giving schools really useful data to help them prevent absence – for example, sharing with secondary schools the attendance data of the Year Six children who will come to them in the autumn.
'That transition is where many children who are already a bit absent deteriorate further. Schools really welcome this, because it gives them the opportunity to talk to feeder schools about the background and put special effort into supporting and engaging children who might be at risk of poor attendance.'
Cook, at the CSJ, says action to tackle the mounting issues facing Britain must start in the classroom. By the time young people join the dole queue, it is often too late.
He says: 'The social contract in this country is fraying, and as parents we must step up to do our bit. Attendance is not optional, getting children to school is the first step in giving them a future.'
In the space of just one academic year, Sheedy has managed to halve the number of severe absentees missing more than half their lessons, cutting it from one in five to one in eight. The number of unauthorised absences is down by a third.
He recognises there is still much more work to do, with a significant share of pupils still missing at least half a day of school a week. But rising attendance is already leading to better results and Sheedy beams as he boasts of overtaking other schools in the local area in terms of attainment.
It is important to get back to basics, he says.
'You have to make sure that you've got a calm and orderly building. We've got 22 children who are visually impaired. Five years ago, those children didn't leave the provision they had upstairs, whereas now they're integrated into lessons and down in the canteen eating their lunch, which was just not an option before.
'Imagine sitting there minding your business, and a cheeseburger just flies into the back of your head.'
Hanson, once one of the worst in the country for attendance, now welcomes headteachers from across the UK who want to learn how to keep children coming to class.
It's a remarkable turnaround, but just one of many required to save Britain from a future crisis.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Southport stabbing victim reveals how she survived attack - and fears 'it could happen again'
Southport stabbing victim reveals how she survived attack - and fears 'it could happen again'

Sky News

time43 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Southport stabbing victim reveals how she survived attack - and fears 'it could happen again'

A girl who was stabbed in the Southport attack has told Sky News how she thought she was going to die that day. Warning: Some readers may find this content distressing It is exactly a year since Axel Rudakubana killed three girls and attempted to murder eight others at a summer holiday Taylor Swift-themed dance event in the seaside town. The girl, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was stabbed in the back and the arm after going to the class with her younger sister. She is now campaigning for children to have mandatory first aid training at school in response to the growth of knife crime. She said she clearly remembers what happened that day. "Some of the girls were sat down in a circle making bracelets with the teachers, and a couple of them were getting up to get beads. I was standing between two tables and he came through the doors. "He stabbed a little girl in front of me and then came for me and stabbed my arm. I turned and then he stabbed my back, even though I didn't feel it at the time. "There was a bunch of girls huddled around so I just started pushing them down the stairs, telling them to get out and run. "I was thinking 'Where's my sister?' and 'We need to get out'." She and many of the other victims ran to the house of a neighbour for shelter. "I just thought that I was going to die," she said. Killer 'looked possessed' The girl said she can clearly picture Rudakubana that day. "What I remember most about him is his eyes. They just didn't look human, they looked possessed. It was kind of like a dream and you're on a movie set and watching yourself go through it and make these decisions. "It's just kind of like adrenaline. People like to think they know what they'd do in that situation but, in reality, you don't until you're in it." Six-year-old Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe, who was seven, and nine-year-old Alice da Silva Aguiar died in the attack. It is something she finds difficult to talk about. "I don't think I can express how I feel about it," the girl said. "A lot of anger and sadness." In January, Rudakubana was jailed for life and must serve a minimum of 52 years before he can be considered for release. The chairman of the public inquiry into the atrocity called the attack "one of the most egregious crimes in our country's history". Carrying knives 'disgusting' The girl who survived has now launched a campaign, supported by a clothing range called "Go Anywhere, Be Anything" to raise funds, to improve the ability of schoolchildren to help in the event of knife attacks. "Everyone that's going out and carrying knives is getting younger and younger," she said. "And to think that it's people my age is like disgusting. "I just want to try and do the best I can to let people know that it's not okay to do that and that they need to think about what they're doing and the risks and how they're harming themselves and other people." Her sister, who was also there that day, helped design "Go Anywhere, Be Anything". A three-minute silence will be held in Southport at 3pm to mark one year on from the attack. In an open letter to the community, Sefton Council wrote: "This period is incredibly hard for the families of Alice, Bebe and Elsie and all of those children and adults injured or who suffered lifelong psychological impact of witnessing the attack, and we acknowledge the huge impact on their lives, too. "We must not forget the local people who rushed to support and to our emergency responders. They all remain always in our thoughts." It is a sentiment shared by the survivor. "You live in fear every day that it could happen again," she said.

Evil will not define Southport a year on from attack, deputy council leader says
Evil will not define Southport a year on from attack, deputy council leader says

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Evil will not define Southport a year on from attack, deputy council leader says

The people of Southport will not 'allow evil to define' them, a year on from a knife attack on a children's dance class. Tuesday marks one year since Axel Rudakubana, who was 17 at the time, entered the Taylor Swift-themed holiday club in Hart Street and fatally injured Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, Bebe King, six, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven. In the days following the attack, during which he also attempted to kill eight other children and two adults, violent disorder broke out in the seaside town and across the country. Deputy leader of Sefton Council Paulette Lappin said now the community was looking to move forward in a positive way. She told the PA news agency: 'It still remains beyond belief, even though I know it to be true, and so it's just very sad. 'From sadness, we hope to bring goodness and that's all we can do.' This summer the area outside Southport Town Hall, where hundreds laid floral tributes and a vigil was held last year, is again filled with colourful flowers. The flowers are now in planters which have been put in place ahead of its transformation into legacy gardens, in memory of those who lost their lives in the attack. Councillor Lappin said: 'It will be designed for the enjoyment and the fun of children, so that all children can come and they can all play in here. 'That's what we have to remember, that it is an absolutely terrible tragedy, but we cannot allow evil to define us.' A new playground is also being built at Churchtown Primary School, in memory of Alice and Bebe, who were both pupils. On the anniversary, members of the public are being asked not to lay flowers but to consider making donations to local causes – including funds set up in the names of the victims of the attack and the Southport Strong Together Appeal, which was established last year to support those affected. No large vigil will be held, but a three-minute silence will be observed at 3pm and churches and community centres will be open for those looking for support or space for quiet reflection. Cllr Lappin said plans for the day were guided by the families, who had their 'thoughts, compassion and incredible respect'. Last summer, a recovery fund was set up to help businesses affected by the attack and to support families. Cllr Lappin said the council had worked with the voluntary sector, specialists involved in trauma, community and faith groups and the emergency services over the past year. 'We hope that this is a holistic approach of listening to everybody with respect and dignity so that we can actually move forward together as much as we possibly can,' she said. 'This work is ongoing. It will continue.'

Southport, one year on: Seaside town still in mourning readies itself for an 'emotional day' as the first anniversary of horror killing spree that left three girls dead, families torn apart and all of Britain in shock arrives
Southport, one year on: Seaside town still in mourning readies itself for an 'emotional day' as the first anniversary of horror killing spree that left three girls dead, families torn apart and all of Britain in shock arrives

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Southport, one year on: Seaside town still in mourning readies itself for an 'emotional day' as the first anniversary of horror killing spree that left three girls dead, families torn apart and all of Britain in shock arrives

Exactly a year ago sadistic Southport murderer Axel Rudakubana savaged children at a Taylor Swift-themed summer holiday dance class. Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, all died and eight more children aged between seven and 13 suffered knife wounds, as did dance teacher Leanne Lucas while trying to protect the children. To remember the devastating day, the Merseyside town will hold a three-minute silence and lower flags on public buildings. But the families of the three girls who were murdered have asked for no flowers to be left at schools or the scene of the killings and for no vigils or large public gatherings. To respect their wishes, public bodies will not call the day an anniversary. Patrick Hurley, the MP for Southport told The Guardian it would be a 'really emotional day' for the town which bore the 'long-lasting detrimental psychological and emotional impact of the attack.' He added: 'We know that what happened in July last year is always going to be a part of the town's history but there's so much more than that. 'It's a day to remember the girls who were killed and it's a day to remember the response of the community when everybody came out and supported everbody else.' In an attack that prosecutors described as a 'meticulously-planned rampage' the knife-wielding maniac knifed as many children as he could within 12 minutes. Businessman John Hayes, who rushed to the scene from his office nearby and attempted to overpower Rudakubana, was also stabbed. Others nearby who heard screams also hurried to the scene and police arrived, bringing the horrific incident to an end. One of the officers who was called was Sergeant Greg Gillespie. Describing his experience of the traumatic, he told the BBC about the 'fear' he saw in people's faces - even recalling seeing a little girl he thought to be dead. He said: 'I don't think there's any amount of training or experience that can quite prepare you to deal with something like that or to process it. 'Everyone now knows the sequence of events that occurred that day - that wasn't known to us at the time.' He added that all they knew was that a child had been stabbed and 'the offender was in the building.' Sergeant Gillespie, alongside PC Luke Holden and PCSO Timothy Parry all arrived at the scene but without any understanding of the scale of the stabbing. Sergeant Gillespie and PC Holden entered the building 'shoulder to shoulder' and were immediately faced with 17-year-old Rudakubana, who 'showed' them the blood-stained knife. All three officers were recognised at the Police Federation of England and Wales 2025 bravery awards. PC Holden told the BBC: 'My hyper-vigilance increased 1,000% and I was wary of everyone in every situation. 'You start thinking worst case of every situation you deal with. All the officers said the attack changed their lives. Rudakubana was given a life sentence, with a minimum term of 52 years - one of the highest on record - after pleading guilty to the three murders and 10 attempted murders, plus other offences, including making the deadly toxin ricin, in January. Police intelligence officers are monitoring social media to look for any attempts to stir up disorder in or around Southport this week. They want to prevent a repeat of the anti-immigration riots that spread across England after the attack last summer. Meanwhile, Southport's town hall gardens are set to undergo a £10million renovation to commemorate the girls. Their families said they hoped the new square and community space would serve as 'a legacy inspired by our three beautiful amazing girls'. There is currently an inquiry investigating how various agencies, including the police, the courts, the NHS and social services, failed to spot the risk posed by Rudakubana, 18, in the run-up to the attack. Rudakubana had been referred to Prevent, the Government's counter-terror programme, three times but his case was closed prematurely because he did not have a clear political or religious motivation. He had also been caught repeatedly with a knife. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper told MPs that a review of his contact with the programme found he had 'admitted to having carried a knife more than ten times, yet the action against him was far too weak'. She said he was referred to Prevent repeatedly because he was 'expressing interest in school shootings, the London Bridge attack, the IRA, MI5 and the Middle East'. Tablet computers at his home showed he downloaded papers on historical violence by the Nazis, Genghis Khan and even relatively obscure conflicts in French colonies during the 17th century – plus footage of beheadings and torture. As well as the digital discoveries, a machete and scabbard, a set of arrows and a black holdall were found in Rudakubana's bedroom at the family home in Banks, Lancashire, a village five miles north of Southport. The Prevent review, conducted since the summer, has concluded that 'too much weight was placed on the absence of ideology' and that his case 'should not have been closed' by counter-terror police who were assessing whether he posed a threat. On the second day of the hearings, a series of moving impact statements from the parents of four of the girls who attended the holiday club, at the Hart Space, in the Merseyside seaside town, were read to a hushed council chamber at Liverpool Town Hall. Sir Adrian said Rudakubana perpetrated 'an almost unimaginable but nonetheless mercilessly calculated' killing spree at the Taylor Swift-themed dance club. The retired judge described the attack as 'one of the most egregious crimes in our country's history.' Sir Adrian said it was 'truly critical' that the inquiry secured answers for the families of Rudakubana's victims and made recommendations to prevent anything similar happening in the future. The hearings will examine why several agencies, including the police, the courts, the NHS and social services, who all had contact with Rudukabana, failed to identify the risk he posed. It will also investigate whether the attack could or should have been prevented. Sir Adrian said that one consideration for the inquiry would be whether courts should be allowed to impose restrictions on people suspected of planning serious violent offences, even if they have not committed any crime. It will look into whether measures, such as imposing curfews, electronic tags, internet bans or restrictions on social media use should be available in such circumstances. Sir Adrian said the inquiry will examine whether Prevent needs to be overhauled to address those drawn into extreme violence without a clear 'religious or political cause.' The chairman said there appeared to be several 'undisputed and troubling facts' that already suggested Rudakubana's attack was far from being 'an unforeseeable catastrophic event.' By July last year, he had been on the radar of various State agencies for several years, had a 'known predilection for knife crime' and posed a 'very serious and significant risk of violent harm,' Sir Adrian said. 'Furthermore, his ability, unhindered, to access gravely violent material on the internet, to order knives online at a young age, and then to leave home unsupervised to commit the present attack, speaks to a wholesale and general failure to intervene effectively, or indeed at all, to address the risks that he posed,' he added. Police discovered a sinister arsenal of weapons, including a bow and arrow, two machetes, two large kitchen knives, a sledgehammer, materials to make Molotov cocktail explosives and ingredients to make the deadly toxin ricin, at Rudakubana's home following the attack. The widespread rioting and civil unrest following the murders is not being examined by the inquiry. The hearings have been adjourned until September, when statements from the remaining relatives of victims and survivors are expected to continue.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store