Dozens of pupils unable to secure school places using grant for nine hours’ tuition at home

Enrolment pressure at second level most acute in Greater Dublin Area

Dozens of pupils who have been unable to find places in mainstream schools since last September are being taught at home, new figures show. Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA
Dozens of pupils who have been unable to find places in mainstream schools since last September are being taught at home, new figures show. Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA

Dozens of pupils who have been unable to find places in mainstream schools since last September are being taught at home, new figures show.

In some parts of the country, especially the Dublin commuter belt, some families have struggled to find school places for their children, with pressure most acute at second level.

Department of Education data shows a total of 44 pupils without school places are being taught at home under a home tuition scheme aimed at providing a compensatory education service.

Under the scheme, families receive a grant to employ a qualified tutor to provide up to nine hours of home tuition per week.

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In addition, department figures released to The Irish Times show a total of 425 children who were unable to access preschool services are also in receipt of tuition hours, as are a further 20 school-aged children with additional needs waiting on special classes or special school placement.

For the coming school year, parents of children in areas of high enrolment pressure are being advised by education authorities to apply to multiple secondary schools due to the volume of oversubscribed places in such areas.

Almost half of all secondary schools across the State are set to be oversubscribed in the coming school year, with the highest concentration in areas where there has been rapid population growth such as parts of Dublin, Kildare, Wicklow, Galway and Cork. Authorities insist all children who need a school place will get one.

Minister for Education Norma Foley had aimed to trial a common applications system — where parents would fill out a single form stating their school preference — to alleviate anxieties for parents. This, however, has not progressed in time for the coming school year.

In the west Dublin area, a high enrolment pressure zone, Fine Gael Senator Emer Currie said the enrolment system was “torturous”.

“They’re asking parents to swamp multiple schools with applications, and that leads to one thing — more oversubscription, more bulging waiting lists, and more worry and panic for parents who won’t believe there’s a school place at the end of a 300-student waiting list,” she said.

Too many students, she said, were securing places at the last moment, when they may have already bought uniforms and iPads for another school.

In a sign of the growing issue of mental health problems, a further 150 young people receive home tuition because of “school refusal” or anxiety issues.

Carl O'Brien

Carl O'Brien

Carl O'Brien is Education Editor of The Irish Times. He was previously chief reporter and social affairs correspondent