School Attendance Support Service
Working together to improve school attendance
Improving and promoting school attendance is everyone's responsibility and in Southampton confronting school absence is being raised across all agencies and is becoming a shared responsibility. It is a priority for all council services and partner agencies and needs to become a priority for all communities.
Excellent school attendance is a critical factor in ensuring improved attainment and future life outcomes. It is central to social inclusion and has a major impact on a child’s future life opportunities. All children and young people in Southampton should be receiving their full entitlement to education so that they are equipped to fulfil their potential and make good choices as young adults and citizens; for themselves and their communities.
The foundation for ensuring that children, young people, and their families within Southampton achieve their full potential is to create an ethos in which excellent school attendance is developed and nurtured. This will involve a partnership between the young people themselves, families, schools, all colleagues, and professionals working together across the range of agencies and voluntary groups that work within the city to improve outcomes for all children and young people.
View the working together to improve school attendance guidance.
View guidance for parents on school attendance.
What is the local authority doing to support children and families in improving school attendance?
Southampton School Attendance Support Service SHOW
Allocated Education Welfare Officer (EWO) SHOW
Role of the Education Welfare Officer (EWO) SHOW
Your responsibilities as a parent
Section 7 Education Act 1996 places a duty on parents to ensure that their child of compulsory school age receives a suitable education, either by regular attendance at school or otherwise. Once your child is registered at a school, you are legally responsible for making sure they attend regularly. This means your child should not have sessions of unauthorised absence.
By law all children of compulsory school age (normally 5-16) must receive a suitable full-time education. As a parent you have a legal responsibility to make sure this happens, either by registering your child at a school or by making other arrangements to give them a suitable, full time education. Once your child is registered at school you are legally responsible for making sure they attend regularly. This means your child should attend on time and should not have any unauthorised absence. Furthermore, Section 576 of the Education Act 1996 defines a parent as:
- All natural parents, whether they are married or not
- Any person who, although not a natural parent, has parental responsibility for a child or young person
- Any person who, although not a natural parent, has care of a child or young person
Having care of a child or young person means that a person whom the child lives and who looks after the child, regardless of what their relationship is with the child, is considered to be a parent in education law.