There is a sentence many parents hear when their child is struggling with school:
đ âThey need to be in.â
Itâs often said with urgency.
Sometimes with concern.
And increasingly⌠with pressure.
Because attendance matters.
But what happens when a child is not coping?
When âGetting Them Inâ Becomes the Priority
For many SEND families, the conversation shifts quickly.
Instead of asking:
đ âIs this child okay?â
The focus becomes:
đ âHow do we get them into school?â
Parents are told:
- Their childâs attendance is too low
- They need to push through
- This is something they need to manage
But behind closed doors, the reality often looks very different.
What Parents Are Actually Seeing
Children who:
- Wake up anxious or distressed
- Struggle to get through the school day
- Mask their emotions until they canât anymore
- Come home and shut down or explode
This isnât defiance.
đ This is a child who is overwhelmed.
The Impact of Getting It Wrong
When a child is pushed beyond their ability to cope, the outcome is not resilience.
Itâs the opposite.
Over time, you may see:
- Increased anxiety
- Emotional shutdown
- Loss of trust in adults
- A growing fear of school
What starts as âlow attendanceâ can become something much deeper:
đ A child who no longer feels safe in education
The Pressure Children Are Under
Itâs important to recognise the environment many children are navigating.
Increased academic expectations.
Earlier exams.
Constant performance measures.
For some children, particularly those with additional needs, this isnât motivating.
đ Itâs overwhelming.
And when a child is already strugglingâŚ
đ that pressure can push them past their limit
Mental Health Is Not Separate From Education
This is where the conversation needs to change.
Mental health is not something that sits alongside education.
đ It is what makes education possible.
A child who is anxious, dysregulated, or overwhelmed:
- Cannot engage properly
- Cannot retain information
- Cannot feel safe enough to learn
And yet, in many cases, attendance continues to be treated as the priority.
A More Important Question
Instead of asking:
đ âHow do we get this child into school?â
We should be asking:
đ âWhat is stopping this child from accessing education safely?â
Because those are two very different conversations.
This Isnât About Avoiding School
Parents are not choosing this.
They are responding to what they are seeing:
đ a child who is struggling
And in many cases, they are left trying to balance:
- The pressure to attend
- The reality of their childâs mental health
Often without the support they need.
A Final Thought
Attendance does matter.
But it should never come at the cost of:
đ a childâs safety
đ their mental health
đ their ability to cope
Because a child who doesnât feel safeâŚ
đ cannot learn
If this is something youâre navigating, youâre not alone.
đ Visit AskEllie.co.uk for support, guidance, and help understanding your options.
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