Andy
Retired committee member
Obviously not directly about ME but I'm sure it talks about many issues that parents of children with ME face.
https://evolvepolitics.com/teachers...-ban-him-from-xmas-party-for-poor-attendance/For a long time, children have been praised for having good attendance at school. However, in recent years there has been a dramatic change in the way this praise is approached.
The bar for what counts as ‘good’ attendance seems to have been raised to impossibly high levels. Worryingly, children are now being penalised for not achieving the national average of 95%, even when the absences are linked to medical conditions.
Whilst parents disagree on many aspects of schooling, the majority seem in agreement that the way schools are approaching attendance needs to change.
Medical conditions
In January, Jessica Smullen set up a petition after her five-year-old son, who suffers with severe asthma, was told he would not allowed to attend his school’s Christmas celebration. The reason? He had not achieved 98% attendance after being sent home ‘after the school said that he was too ill to be in’. Smullen’s petition urges schools to “stop penalising children with medical conditions for their attendance” and so far has more than 140,000 signatures.
When children and parents are constantly pressurised into high attendance, it results in sick children being sent into school. A child like Noah is more likely to catch illnesses due to an ongoing medical condition, and so will end up battling not only their own symptoms, but everyone else’s illnesses, too. Did Noah ever really have a chance at achieving 98% attendance?