According to the NASUWT teaching union children are turning
up to school sick because their parents cannot afford to take time off to care
for them, teachers say. School staff are also still seeing youngsters arriving
for lessons hungry, tired and wearing inappropriate clothes due to a continuing
squeeze on family finances. In some cases, teachers reported being aware of
pupils living in “Victorian conditions”, of youngsters coming to school with no
socks or coat and of more families depending on food banks.
It warned that the lives of many children are young people
are being “blighted and degraded by poverty and homelessness”. Seven in 10
(69%) of teachers said they had seen pupils coming to school hungry, while
eight in 10 (80%) had witnessed youngsters turning up in clothes that were
inappropriate for the weather and similar proportions reported children
arriving in unwashed or damaged and frayed clothing. 78% said they have seen
pupils without appropriate footwear and 55% had seen youngsters who were unable
to afford uniform.
One teacher pointed out “Pupils who come into school unwell.
Often their parents cannot afford to take a day off work, and therefore send
their children to school when they ought to be at home.” Another reported:
“Pupils who need medical attention, but parents are not taking them/unable to
take them to the GP, optician and/or dentist.”
The findings give an indication of the impact of difficult
financial circumstances on children, with around a third (32%) of those polled
saying they had seen pupils who arrived or left school halfway through a term
because they were forced to leave their homes, the same proportion reported
teaching children who were living in temporary accommodation and just over a
fifth (22%) said they knew of youngsters who had lost their homes due to money
pressures.
Almost one in five (19%) said they had lent or given pupils
money, 24% had given food and 62% had lent out or given youngsters equipment.
Others said they had seen colleagues, or their school, offer these items.
The NASUWT general secretary, Chris Keates, said: “Poverty
and homelessness take a physical and emotional toll on children. They often
cannot concentrate when they are in school because they are tired and hungry,
have no space to do homework and have to travel long distances to get to school
from temporary accommodation. They are likely to suffer more ill health and
absenteeism.”
Since 2010 we have seen policies that have been designed to
help a privileged minority of our society.
Results are clear to see:-
1. 2 million
people extra in poorly paid work -600 thousand extra on Zero hours and 1.4
million forced to become self employed on low earnings with no rights.
2. Rocketing
rents in the private sector. Only the very poor get help with their rent. This has
fuelled housing prices
3. An increase in
VAT that has hit the poorest far harder than the rich.
4. No controls on
lending so the poorest have seen interest rates at 2000-4000+%
5. Interest on
Credit Card spending at 15% to 39%+ when on an ISA you are lucky to get 1,5%
And much more. It is a shameful indictment of austerity
politics.
Of course some of our society are struggling and they need
to vote for a real change – a socialist change.
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