View attachment 94035 From today's Times.
This often comes up on school threads so I thought it was worth mentioning.
This is going to happen more and more.
Schools are being squeezed hard by cuts to funding, and - as ever - what will happen is that resources for minority groups will feel the pressure hardest/first. If a school has to lose some staff headcount, it will make more sense to them to get rid of a couple of teaching assistants or LSAs than to lose a member of teaching staff (for example).
Other support services also risk being cut - the schools counselling provision in my LA was severely slashed, as was the behavioural support and educational psychology service, and I suspect that ongoing cuts will continue further.
What most of these services tend to have in common is that they are perceived as having less impact because they're only likely to affect smaller subsets of the school's population - the problem is that those subsets are frequently the ones where, left unsupported, they will have consequential effects on the rest of the school. Withdraw support from children with ASD, emotional difficulties, or challenging behaviours, and you quickly find that the overall experience suffers as a result. So, starting from that point - "we have a difficult child and no resources to manage them" - the option of excluding them becomes increasingly inescapable.
I've seen it happen informally - along the lines of "Well, Mrs Bloggins, little Jimmy is becoming very disruptive, and we feel that if this continues, we'll end up having to formally exclude him, which will look bad on his record, so why not keep him at home for part/some/all of the time and we'll send some work home?". Sometimes, they'll provide a "home tutor" (in my LA this usually means the child attends at a youth centre for a session or two a week), but it still means the child has been excluded from the overall educational experience, and any hope of addressing the problems. In my area, they even closed the Pupil Referral Unit (PRU - the place kids who are excluded from mainstream school are sent), in favour of returning the children to mainstream school, an experiment which has resulted in a significant rise in classroom issues as formerly-excluded children are booted back into a system they perceive as having rejected them once already, followed by at least a few exclusions as their behaviour crosses the line and the school excludes them again, this time with no PRU to go to.
I have long thought that the way we treat children in education speaks volumes about the awareness of those in charge that they can get away with a lot more than they would if these were adults with the rights of adults.
So I am not remotely surprised that this is now news. At least it
is news, although interesting that it's about a group that, in the hierarchy of Misfit, comes fairly near the bottom - you won't see the "bad attitude" kids being treated quite as sympathetically by the Times
et al as children who are deemed to be in greater need through no fault of their own.