Being at School: A Prerequisite for Educational Equity
Date
2024
Authors
te Riele, K.
Sullivan, A.
Rudling, E.
Bessell, S.
Higgins, D.
Guerzoni, M.A.
Editors
Pinnk, W.T.
Advisors
Journal Title
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Volume Title
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Book chapter
Citation
Education, Equity, Economy, 2024 / Pinnk, W.T. (ed./s), Ch.6, pp.89-112
Statement of Responsibility
Conference Name
Abstract
Attending school is a pre-requisite not only for academic learning, but also for social connections, emotional wellbeing, and physical development. This is even more important for students experiencing disadvantage, such as those in out-of-home care. However, these students are likely to be absent from school far more often than their more privileged peers, which means school attendance is a crucial equity issue. Importantly, absence from school is not just an educational concern but also a social concern. It is certainly not simply the fault of students, their families or carers. In this chapter, we outline three ways of reimagining school attendance. First, making school systems more inclusive to reduce system-generated absences. Second, ensuring schools are places where students want to be, to reduce unauthorised absences. Finally, strengthening links between social services and schools to enable students to be at school and reduce authorised absences. All of these require changes in practices, political will, and proper resourcing. Enabling students experiencing disadvantage to gain the full benefits of school by being in class and in the playground alongside their peers is a key foundation for a better and more equitable future—both for these students themselves, and for our wider communities.
School/Discipline
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Copyright 2024 The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2024
Access Condition Notes: Accepted manuscript available after 01 October 2026