Off-rolling


Off-rolling or offrolling is the practice in the United Kingdom, of removing disadvantaged and struggling pupils from the school roll, before they take their final exams so their poor results are not included in the school statistics.

Definition

There is no official definition. Ofsted defines the practice:
Off-rolling is the practice of removing a pupil from the school roll without using a permanent exclusion, when the removal is primarily in the best interests of the school, rather than the best interests of the pupil. This includes pressuring a parent to remove their child from the school roll.

Process

To the classroom teacher, the first they know is that a child is not in class anymore. Requests to the senior leadership team for information give no response or details just that the parent has removed them. According to Ofsted, who also wished to know why the child is no longer there, and published a report on 9 May 2019, 24% of secondary teachers have experiences off-rolling, while an additional 51% had heard of it but not experienced it. Teachers are suspicious that off-rolling is taken place, when it occurs at key points in the year, when they have been recently asked for a behaviour report about the child or the child is a know low attender or low achiever. They are suspicious when the off-rolled child was being discusses for permanent exclusion. It is possible that transfer was genuine, but in a climate where the reasons aren't given, they assume that this is one of the pattern.
Two techniques have been used, transferring the child who is already receiving help through an alternative provider such as a specialist behavioural or autism unit, fully onto the units roll. Persuading the parents that it is in everyone's interest if the child remains at home and is taught by the family or privately. When the school census is done and the statistics collated, the child's poor results will not depress the schools average.

Legitimate reasons to remove a child from the school roll

This is governed by the Education Regulations 2006 – Regulation 8.
At the end of 2018, Ofsted identified 300 schools where the numbers leaving the roll was abnormally high, it wouldn't name them but contacted their academy trust or controlling local authority. In June 2019, Ofsted failed Falmouth School where if found pupils had been removed “against the wishes of the family, the advice of the local authority and the professional judgement of other agencies.”
The inspection of The Sutton Academy, St Helens, which is overseen by the St Helens College, showed 12 pupils who were receiving education, through an AP in the dual-roll mode, were transferred to the AP, removing them from Sutton's roll. This practice had been going on, there and in other local schools with the knowledge of the local authority for several years. It has now stopped. Other schools criticised by Ofsted for off-rolling pupils are Harrop Fold School in Salford and the Shenley E-ACT Academy in Birmingham, both of which were put in special measures. The Discovery Academy, Stoke-on-Trent had it management rating downgraded on the personal intervention of Amanda Spielman.
Philip Nye, working for FFT Education Datalab, explains that in total, 24,600 pupils disappeared from mainstream schools last year, leaving for unknown destinations. The previous year it was 22,000. These were students that had been there the year before and now were not. It is estimated that as many as 9,000 disadvantaged 16-year-olds were not taking exams or recorded in school league tables because they cannot be located on school records.

Statistics

Jason Bradbury, Ofsteds chief statistician, has identified certain trends. London is particularly badly affected.‘Academies, particularly those in some multi-academy trusts, appear to be losing proportionately more pupils than local authority schools. Conversely, local authority schools seem to be taking on proportionately more pupils,’
The Education Select Committee in July 2018 said that 'off-rolling is in part driven by school policies created by the Department for Education’. ‘The Department cannot wash its hands of the issue, just as schools cannot wash their hands of their pupils.’ Progress 8 incentivises exclusion; it detering schools from retaining pupils ‘classed as difficult or challenging’.
The government under pressure, delegated the task of eliminating it to Ofsted. Ofsted rewrote its inspection quidelines, and as a consequence action started to be taken against high off-rollers. The message was that off-rolling was not transparent, where exclusion had a set of verifiable procedures so was fairer. The National Association of Head Teachers warn that the resulting confusion will unreasonably drive up the rate of permanent exclusions.

Consequences

When pupils are off-rolled, the consequences for them are severe: only around one per cent of children who leave to an alternative provision or a special school achieve the benchmark five good GCSEs. About 20,000 children leave the rolls of mainstream secondary schools to a range of other destinations: with only six per cent achieving five good GCSEs.