Attendance awards are increasingly seen as outdated and inequitable in education for several key reasons. Here’s a breakdown of why:

⚖️ 1. They Penalize Students for Circumstances Beyond Their Control

Health and disability: Students with chronic illnesses, mental health issues, or disabilities may miss more school than their peers—not because of a lack of commitment but due to necessary care.

Family responsibilities: Some students must miss school to care for siblings or support family needs.

Economic disparity: Lower-income students may lack access to transportation, stable housing, or healthcare, making consistent attendance harder.

➡️ Rewarding perfect attendance unfairly favors students with fewer external challenges.

???? 2. They Prioritize Quantity Over Quality

Being physically present doesn’t guarantee engagement or learning.

A student who comes to school while sick just to keep an award may not be participating meaningfully—and may harm others (see below).

???? 3. They Encourage Presenteeism (Coming to School Sick)

Especially in the post-COVID era, encouraging students to come to school while ill is dangerous.

Perfect attendance awards send the message: “Being here matters more than being well or keeping others safe.”

???? 4. They Reinforce Harmful Norms About “Perfection”

Some students experience shame or anxiety over missing a day, even when they have a valid reason.

The message becomes: “Your worth is tied to perfect records,” rather than effort, learning, or growth.

????‍???? 5. They Undermine Inclusive Education Goals

Equity in education means meeting students where they are and supporting them based on need.

Attendance awards overlook systemic inequities and reinforce a “one-size-fits-all” standard of success.

✅ Alternatives to Consider:

Recognise resilience, academic improvement, participation, or kindness.

Create supports for attendance (like school-based health clinics or transportation assistance), not punishments or rewards.

Emphasise engagement over raw attendance numbers.