On a typical school day in Australia, about 11 per cent of students who should be at school are absent.

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About 40 per cent of students – more than 1.2 million – miss at least one day of school every two weeks.

These absences add up quickly. Missing one day of school a fortnight is the equivalent of missing four weeks a year – and missing a whole year between the first day of school and the end of Year 10.

This is a big and growing problem: since 2018, attendance has fallen in 96 per cent of Australia’s schools.

School attendance matters. The more a child misses school, the worse their school results are likely to be. And missing out on school can also affect children’s social skills and emotional and mental well-being.

Federal, state, and territory Education Ministers have committed to getting school attendance back to pre-pandemic rates by the end of the decade.

Hitting this ambitious target will require a fundamental rethink of how we prioritise school attendance in Australia. New approaches – by politicians, principals, parents, and the wider community – are needed to encourage attendance and overcome barriers to going to school.

Governments should take five key first steps:

  1. Launch a public campaign explaining why attending school is so important.
  2. Overhaul the way school attendance data are collected and reported.
  3. Identify schools with strong attendance records and spread their methods to other schools.
  4. Give parents better health advice on when their children should stay home – and when they should go to school.
  5. Make school attendance an urgent, whole-of-government priority.

A national focus on school attendance – starting with this five-point plan – would help to give every Australian child the chance to learn, every day.

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Molly Chapman

Associate
Molly Chapman is an Associate in Grattan Institute’s Health Program. She previously worked at Deloitte Access Economics where she contributed to a range of health economics and social policy research, primarily within the public sector. Molly holds a Bachelor of Economics and a Bachelor of Applied Data Analytics from the Australian National University.