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Educational Poverty: Children in Residential Care

14 July 2022

Lead MP

Robert Halfon

Debate Type

Ministerial Statement

Tags

Social CareEducationEmploymentForeign AffairsChildren & FamiliesLocal Government
Other Contributors: 6

At a Glance

Robert Halfon raised concerns about educational poverty: children in residential care in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Government Statement

Social CareEducationEmploymentForeign AffairsChildren & FamiliesLocal Government
Government Statement
The Minister of State, Department for Education Robert Halfon, announced the findings from a report on educational outcomes for children in care. He highlighted widespread state failure to ensure looked-after children receive quality education, citing statistics such as only 37% reaching expected standards at key stage 2 compared with 65% of non-looked-after children and just 7.2% achieving the grade 5 good pass in English and maths GCSE. Key issues include schools blocking admissions for looked-after children, unregulated education settings, unsuitable accommodation, poor career outcomes, and high homelessness rates among care leavers. The report recommends tackling data black holes with annual data publication through a dashboard, penalising schools refusing admissions, sanctioning local authorities failing in their duty, extending pupil premium plus funding beyond age 16, rolling out the Staying Close scheme nationally, exploring options to funnel excessive care home profits into improving the system, and increasing early intervention spending.

Shadow Comment

Ian Mearns
Shadow Comment
The shadow Minister for Children and Families Ian Mearns emphasised the urgent need for the Government to react positively to the report's recommendations. He highlighted alarming statistics such as 41% of care leavers aged 19-21 being out of education, employment or training and only 2% taking up apprenticeships at age 16-18. Mearns stressed that paying £4.81 an hour to youngsters living independently after coming out of care is not satisfactory.
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