School attendance is often talked about as though it’s simple: young people should go to school, and if they don’t, it must be because they “don’t care.” But anyone who works closely with children, families, or education knows this couldn’t be further from the truth. The reasons young people disengage from school are complex, layered, and often invisible from the outside.
We sat down with Puti L, one of our Youth Support Development Workers, to hear her insights on why some young people disengage from school. She shared the hidden barriers students face and how outreach and tailored support can help them re-engage and thrive.
Understanding the hidden barriers to school attendance isn’t just helpful — it’s essential for supporting young people back into education, employment, and stable futures.
The Myth of “They Just Don’t Want to Go”
A common misconception is that students who don’t attend school are simply unmotivated. In reality, most young people want to succeed. What looks like “lack of motivation” is usually a symptom of something deeper:
- Anxiety or mental health struggles
- Bullying or social isolation
- Unidentified learning difficulties
- Trauma or unstable home environments
- Caregiving responsibilities
- Poverty-related challenges such as lack of transport or appropriate clothing
“People assume young people don’t go to school because they’re lazy or not interested, but that’s almost never the case. When you sit with them, you realise there’s always a story—anxiety, trauma, worries at home. Once you understand the ‘why,’ everything changes.” — Puti, Youth Support Development Worker
When the barriers are unseen, the young person is often judged instead of supported — causing even more disengagement.
Mental Health: The Invisible Weight Students Carry
Anxiety is one of the leading reasons behind persistent non-attendance. For some students, school is overwhelming: crowded hallways, academic pressure, unpredictable social dynamics, and the fear of failure.
Young people rarely have the language to explain this. Instead, we see:
- “School refusal”
- Morning meltdowns
- Physical symptoms like headaches or stomach pain
- Disconnection from peers
Behind these behaviours is a young person in distress, not defiance.
When Home Life Creates Barriers to Attendance
Another major factor is the home environment. Young people may face challenges including:
- Family conflict
- Housing instability
- Parents with physical or mental health needs
- Financial struggles
- Responsibilities for younger siblings
These issues rarely show up on attendance registers, yet they shape a student’s whole world. School becomes an afterthought when survival takes precedence.
“You can’t support a young person by looking only at their attendance. You have to look at their whole world—what mornings look like, what’s happening at home, what they’re carrying emotionally. When we see the person instead of the problem, that’s when engagement starts to shift.” Puti, Youth Support Development Worker
The Role of Trauma and Past Negative Experiences
Many students disengage because school has not historically been a safe or nurturing place. Experiences such as:
- Bullying
- Harsh disciplinary practices
- Repeated academic failure
- Cultural or racial discrimination
can make returning feel impossible. Once trust is broken, rebuilding it requires time, patience, and the right support.
How Outreach and Alternative Support Change the Story
For many people outside the education or social work sector, the word “outreach” can feel like jargon. But in reality, outreach is simple, human, and incredibly impactful.
Outreach is the practice of going to young people—where they are—rather than expecting them to come to school or services on their own.
It’s a proactive, relationship-based approach built on understanding, connection, and flexibility. Outreach workers step outside traditional school settings to meet students in ways that feel safe and achievable for them.
Outreach teams and alternative educational hubs help students re-engage by meeting them where they are — emotionally, socially, and academically. This includes:
- Home visits
- One-on-one sessions
- Trauma-informed support
- Tailored learning pathways
- Family engagement
- Practical resources like transport assistance or uniform support
When a young person feels heard, respected, and supported, their relationship with education can begin again.
“The education in this school is great, I get ongoing support and because there are less students in each class, there's more focus, and it's self-paced" - Kara, Y12 Midland Hub
Why Understanding These Barriers Matters
When we shift the question from “Why aren’t they attending?” to “What’s getting in their way?”, everything changes. We begin to see disengaged students not as problems, but as young people navigating challenges that would overwhelm many adults.
School attendance improves when:
- Families feel supported
- Students feel understood
- Systems adapt to meet real needs
And that’s how futures are rewritten.
"A lot of the young people who come to us haven’t had the easiest run. They’ve experienced trauma, instability, or just never felt like they belonged in a traditional school setting. That doesn’t mean they don’t want to learn; it just means they need something different. That’s where we come in." - Paul Jones, Principal