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Qualitative Study Examining Attendance for Secondary School Pupils with Long-Term Physical Health Conditions

Title: Qualitative Study Examining Attendance for Secondary School Pupils with Long-Term Physical Health Conditions
Language: English
Authors: Vicky Hopwood (ORCID 0009-0007-8553-2899); Simon Pini (ORCID 0000-0001-8455-3240); Bethan K. C. Spencer (ORCID 0009-0007-1630-5879); Cath Kitchen
Source: Continuity in Education. 2024 5(1):76-89.
Availability: Ubiquity Press. Ubiquity Press Ltd, Unit 3N, 6 Osborn Street, London, E1 6TD, United Kingdom. Tel: +44 (0)2073230343; e-mail: editorial@ubiquitypress.com; Web site: https://www.ubiquitypress.com/
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 14
Publication Date: 2024
Document Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Research
Education Level: Secondary Education
Descriptors: Attendance Patterns; Secondary School Students; Health Conditions; Physical Health; Mainstreaming; Foreign Countries; Student Experience; Chronic Illness; Equal Education; Academic Achievement; Mental Health; Interpersonal Relationship
Geographic Terms: United Kingdom (England)
ISSN: 2631-9179
Abstract: For some children and young people (CYP) with long-term physical health conditions (LTPHCs) attending school can be difficult. There is a lack of evidence documenting their school attendance experiences, how schools manage absence for these children, and subsequent effects. This study utilised an existing dataset from eighty-nine 11-18-year-olds in mainstream secondary schools in the United Kingdom across 11 LTPHCs that provided first-hand accounts about the children's experiences of school. Data pre-coded "attendance" were subject to thematic analysis to explore issues emerging. Findings showed attendance patterns varied, with some CYP missing little and others significant amounts of education. Children with LTPHCs wanted to attend school and did their best to navigate education alongside health. School systems for attendance were inconsistent and adversarial. Remedial and supportive action emerged as lacking, and children felt it was their personal responsibility to make up for lost time and missed work when absent. Decisions on whether they attended school, coupled with practices promoting high attendance had detrimental consequences for CYP with LTPHCs educationally, emotionally and socially. Overall, children with LTPHCs felt punished, stigmatised, unfairly treated, unequal and excluded. Results have implications for education, health, and policy practitioners to better plan and target attention so that the LTPHC cohort are treated sensitively and equitably and afforded their entitlement to education when they cannot go to school for health reasons often outside of their control.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2024
Accession Number: EJ1447608
Database: ERIC