A record high 4.3 million children were in poverty in the year to April 2023. As a lone parent, unable to work for five years due to a chronic illness, my children have been forced to be part of this statistic.
As I walked through the park with my 13-year-old son, who is on school holidays this week (thank goodness for better weather which means free days out), I asked how poverty has affected him growing up.
He told me it’s no big deal. He just misses out on the latest games and trainers and expensive trampoline parties. No big deal. Those are things kids can do without.
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But then he said: “It’s more about being treated differently by my classmates. They make fun of me sometimes.” My 17-year-old daughter agrees and tells me that shopping with her friends was awful. She felt so different.
It’s hard to feel different as a child but, as a mum, my worries about how poverty affects my children are constant. The schools put enormous pressure on parents, it’s a never ending list which includes school trips, fundraising raffles and dress-up days such as world book day.
Approved uniform is essential and my son is on his third pair of shoes this year thanks to a growth spurt. All schoolwork is online, so that’s reliable internet and laptops needed. Many children are experiencing data poverty and fall behind at school as a result.