child being home schooled - writing in exercise book

Isle of Wight sees 54% surge in homeschooling since Pandemic outbreak

The number of pupils being homeschooled on the Isle of Wight continues to rise, as some parents say their children are not in the ‘right mental state to be at school’.

Recent figures from the Isle of Wight council show nearly 600 students are being taught at home, instead of attending school — compared to 556 at the same time last year.

54 per cent increase
Between December 2019 to now, there was a 54 per cent increase in the number of children electively home-educated.

The Covid pandemic has contributed to the large increase, and figures remain high now.

At the end of 2019, 384 children were being homeschooled on the Island, while in December 2020 that figured jumped to 464.

Nearly three years later, it stands at 591.

Smith: Not in the right mental state to be at school
Natalie Smith, the council’s assistant education and inclusion director, said one of the reasons numbers are going up is that parents feel their child is not in the right mental state to be at school, or going out at all.

She said,

“We feel strongly, to support those children to be independent teenagers and adults, we need to work very hard with those families to try and re-introduce some kind of school education and get children back into that routine of looking outwards again.”

95 per cent of home schoolers engage very well with IWC
Ms Smith said this is something the council was successful at, as 95 per cent of families that home educate engage very well with the authority, compared to 90 per cent the year before.

This high level of engagement allows the authority to have access to the children and young people so it can work with them to reengage with school education.

If the council does not have ‘eyes on’ the children, Ms Smith said, it is hard to engage with them and know they are safe.

Different types of homeschooler pupils
There were two types of homeschooled pupils, she said, ones where children should be at school — “parents want them to go but there are barriers in the way” — but also those whose parents choose, philosophically, to teach them at home.

The latter was an area, Ms Smith said, ‘that for better or for worse’ the Island has a strong reputation for.

Both sets of pupils have gone up, she said, but as educators, the council had to worry about the first set and what barriers can be removed to get the children back into school.


This article is from the BBC’s LDRS (Local Democracy Reporter Service) scheme, which News OnTheWight is taking part in. Some alterations and additions may have been made by OnTheWight. Ed