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Answer Overview

Response rates from 250 SY voters.

39%
Yes
61%
No
39%
Yes
61%
No

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 250 SY voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 250 SY voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from SY voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @92VQH2Qanswered…3yrs3Y

Yes, however if there is a legitimate reason; ie Physical/Mental illnesses, then no action should be taken by the government.

 @9M63D32answered…8mos8MO

Yes, because there are many reasons that students cannot attend school and we should be helping them rather than punishing them.

 @9L2X73Lanswered…10mos10MO

There are various reasons as to why children truant from school; whether it is bullying, health issues, struggling with schoolwork, more help and resources should be provided to look into why children truant.

 @B27RCS4answered…4 days4D

No, but some students should be allowed to attend a shorter school week if they are not particularly academic.

 @B263MQ3answered…2wks2W

No they should help the people that truant so they don't cause they truant cause they don't want to be there so make it better and more rewarding to go

 @9ZWZQ8Xanswered…1mo1MO

No with exceptions for certain cases where there is a valid reason and the child doesn't want to say it.

 @9ZK4Q5Zanswered…2mos2MO

the government currently sees absences due to mental health as truancy, this should be changed as mental health is a very serious matter, but if there is truly no reason for truancy then it should remain criminalised

 @9TWJR85answered…3mos3MO

No, but there should be better support systems in place to aid mentally ill people and inform students of the value of education (devillainising it)