The Education Background of Looked-After Children who Interact with the Criminal Justice System – Office for National Statistics (December 2022)
Summary
Access to the report produced by the Office for National Statistics in relation to understanding educational attainment and provision, social care background and demographics of looked-after children educated in England who subsequently received a custodial sentence.
Description
The Office for National Statistics has published The Education Background of Looked-After Children Who Interact With The Criminal Justice Report (December 2022). The report looks at the educational attainment and provision, social care background and demographics of looked-after children educated in England who subsequently received a custodial sentence.
The report found the following key points:
- More than half (52%) of looked-after children born in the academic year ending 1994 who attended school in England had a criminal conviction by the age of 24 years compared with 13% of children who had not been in care.
- Imprisonment was a relatively unusual outcome, however, 1 in 7 (15%) looked-after children had received an immediate custodial sentence by the age of 24 years; that is over 10 times the proportion of children who had not been in care.
- A further 37% of looked-after children had received a non-custodial conviction, such as a fine or caution; this is compared with 12% of children who had not been in care.
- 1 in 4 (24%) looked-after children who were male had received an immediate custodial sentence compared with 2% of male children who had not been in care.
- Looked-after children were more likely to have been identified as having special educational needs (SEN); among looked-after children who received an immediate custodial sentence by age 24 years, 9 in 10 (92%) had been identified with SEN.