Internet Access
(Children Eligible for Free School Meals)
(Mitcham and Morden)
(Lab)
I beg to move,
That leave be given to bring in a Bill to place a duty on the
Secretary of State to ensure that all children eligible for free
school meals have a broadband connection and facilities to access
the internet at home; and for connected purposes.
The technological advance in our society and the reliance that we
all now have on the internet is indisputable. Whether it is for
work, entertainment, shopping, bills or even connecting to our
friends and family through social media or video calls, the
internet has changed every part of everybody’s life—or at least
almost everybody’s life.
There is a digital divide in our society: those who have digital
access and those who do not. Although the consequences of being
on the wrong side of the digital divide are felt at all stages
and ages, and we can and should debate those consequences in this
House, it is the divide for our children and young people that I
wish to focus on today and that this Bill aims to close.
I wish to start by setting the scene. I am sorry to do this, but
I will take us back to the beginning of the pandemic. During the
lockdowns, Marcus Rashford scored the most important goal of his
career, using his platform to highlight that food poverty is not
restricted just to school term times. It was a campaign of which
any left winger wearing red would be proud. However, support for
children who are entitled to free school meals should be about
more than just the food.
When schools closed, it was not just lunch that disadvantaged
children missed out on, but connectivity. Before the lockdowns,
approximately 9% of children did not have access to a laptop,
desktop or tablet. Ofcom estimated the number to be up to an
extraordinary 1.78 million children. Those children most likely
to be on the wrong side of the digital divide were already
leaving school 18 months behind their classmates, and the gap was
and is getting worse.
Then schools closed and teachers and pupils moved to remote
learning overnight. Millions of children started the day with Joe
Wicks’ online exercise classes. They completed schoolwork sent
remotely by their teachers, and they joined their classmates in
live remote-learning lessons. It was not perfect, but it was an
extraordinary feat, achieved thanks to the dedication of our
teachers and to the support and patience of home-schooling
parents.
Schools such as the outstanding Ursuline High School were already
at the forefront of technology, giving every pupil a tablet and
offering six lessons a day from home, but others did not have the
kit required. A quarter of children on free school meals did less
than one hour’s schoolwork a day. While approximately 30% of
private school pupils attended four or more online lessons per
day during the first lockdown, just 6.3% of state school pupils
did the same.
Those figures should come as no surprise, considering that one in
five children did not always have access to a device for online
learning while schools were closed. The Government were dragged
kicking and screaming to provide the kit and connectivity
required for those children who could not log in and learn from
home, but for far too many children, that support arrived either
too late or not at all. The roll-out of devices was nothing short
of shambolic: just 5% of teachers in state schools reported that
all their students had a device, compared with 54% at private
schools.
Almost a year after schools first closed, the Daily Mail had to
run an emergency campaign to secure more laptops for the children
who were being left behind, a damning National Audit Office
report concluded that the Department for Education did not even
aim to provide equipment to all the children who lacked it, and
80,224 of the devices provided in the roll-out arrived after
schools had reopened. While the Government slowly recognised the
importance of the devices, a piece of kit is only educationally
useful if it comes with the connectivity required to use it.
The inescapable reality is that, for those still on the wrong
side of the digital divide, every click widened the attainment
gap. Those pupils will have returned to school even further
behind their peers. Meanwhile, a further 880,000 children were in
households with only a mobile internet connection. I do not know
about other hon. Members, but Mum’s mobile does not strike me as
an acceptable solution for logging in and learning from home.
However, this is no problem for the past. Schools may be long
reopened—I hope they never close again—but the days of pen and
paper are long gone and the technological age that we now live in
is here to stay. Homework, research, catch-up—so much is now
online. The consequence is that children on the wrong side of the
digital divide are now even more disadvantaged than before. That
is even before we consider the wider impacts of digital
exclusion, from the inability to develop digital skills for the
world of work to being unable to socialise online with family,
friends and peers. Not only is the reliance on connectivity
indisputable, but it is growing.
If we accept that internet access and digital devices are part of
a child’s learning in a modern-day classroom, then we must also
recognise how essential is the kit and connectivity required for
taking part. Even before covid, evidence suggested that digitally
excluded young people aged 11 to 18 could be spending 60 fewer
hours every year learning online at home, compared with their
peers—a figure that will only have soared.
That is why I am calling for every child entitled to free school
meals to have internet access and an adequate device at home. I
recognise that free school meals may not be a complete measure of
need, but I believe it is the best measure we have. After all,
data collected before the pandemic found that the likelihood of
internet access increased with income, with households with an
average income of £6,000 to £10,000 being half as likely to have
access compared with households earning more than £40,000.
Compared with the vast sums squandered through the pandemic, this
is a low-cost, straightforward and tangible step forward. It is
no silver bullet, but it would make a life-changing difference to
children on the wrong side of the digital divide—children such as
10-year-old Abi in my constituency, who in lockdown secured entry
to the Tiffin Girls’ School, one of the most prestigious grammar
schools in the country, while working in a cramped homeless
hostel with only a refurbished phone donated by Tesco Mobile to
get connected.
The impact for Abi will be lifelong, but data and devices should
not come down to the lottery of charitable giving; nor should
they be deemed a luxury any more. They are an educational
essential. This Bill would give the golden ticket that Abi
received to every child entitled to free school meals—call it
social mobility, call it levelling up or whatever you want.
This is no short-term measure. A recent UNICEF report found that
if action is not taken now to support children and young people,
there will be an estimated gap of 4 million highly skilled
workers by 2024. It took the intervention of a premier league
footballer for Ministers to agree that no child should go to bed
hungry. No matter where we sit in this Chamber, surely we can all
agree that no child’s education should be dependent on their
internet connection.
Question put and agreed to.
Ordered,
That , , , , , Sir , , , and present the Bill.
accordingly presented the
Bill.
Bill read the First time; to be read a Second time on Friday 18
November, and to be printed (Bill 179).