22/05/2026
A part-time timetable sounds supportive on paper.
Reduced pressure. Shorter days. “A chance to regulate.”
Schools often present it as a kindness. A temporary adjustment. A safety net.
But what people rarely talk about is the blast radius.
Because the child doesn’t simply disappear when they leave school at 11am.
Someone has to collect them.
Someone has to supervise them.
Someone has to give up work, rearrange shifts, cancel appointments, rely on grandparents, ask favours from friends, juggle siblings, lose income, lose stability, lose breathing space.
And often, that “temporary” arrangement quietly stretches into weeks. Months. Sometimes years.
Meanwhile, the child is missing education.
Not just maths or English.
They miss science experiments, form time conversations, group work, friendships, assemblies, sports, the random moments where belonging is built.
Schools sometimes speak about part-time timetables as though removing the child from the environment solves the problem.
But what if the environment is the problem?
What if the child is struggling because support isn’t in place, needs aren’t understood, sensory overwhelm isn’t managed, anxiety is escalating, or the curriculum itself has become inaccessible?
A part-time timetable can become less of a bridge back into education… and more of a slow drift out of it.
And once a child becomes used to being absent, reintegration becomes even harder.
Families know this.
Parents lie awake at night trying to work out whether they are helping their child recover or accidentally watching them disappear from education entirely.
And the truth is, many part-time timetables are introduced without enough thought about the long-term impact.
Not just educationally. Socially. Financially. Emotionally.
Because when a child cannot access school full-time, the burden doesn’t vanish.
It transfers.
Usually onto families already carrying far more than most people realise.
A part-time timetable should never become the easy answer to a school struggling to meet need.
It should trigger deeper questions:
Why is this child struggling to access education?
What support is missing?
What adjustments have actually been tried?
What is the long-term plan?
How will lost education be addressed?
And who is supporting the family carrying the hidden cost of all this?
Because reducing a child’s access to education is not a small thing.
And we need to stop pretending it is.