The facts of the matter were not disputed in court as Mrs Harding pleaded guilty. As I suggested in one of my responses to an earlier question, she had little option:
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She seems to have made a great play (at least in what she has said outside court) of inconsistencies exhibited by the school. These may well exist, but this would not be a consideration for the court. In fact she escaped extremely lightly. It seems she was charged under the less serious Section 444(1) of the 1996 Education Act which carries a maximum penalty of a £1,000 fine. In my view she could have been charged under Section 444 (1A) which carries a maximum sentence of three month's custody. The criterion for the more serious offence is "...colluding in and condoning non-attendance or deliberately instigating non-attendance ". Mrs Harding most certainly did both of those.
Those who suggest that this sort of thing was not what Parliament had in mind when passing the legislation are mistaken. The Act was introduced precisely to tackle the problem of parents not ensuring their children's attendance. Taking the child away on holiday during term time is the surest way of all to ensure non-attendance.
Mrs Harding was foolish and inconsiderate in her actions. She was foolish in planning her wedding in term time; foolish in not ensuring she had permission for her son's absence before making arrangements; foolish in not paying the £50 fixed penalty when it was first offered. But most of all she was inconsiderate in putting her wedding before her son's education. She was also inconsiderate towards other pupils in her son's class and towards the school and the staff who have to sort out the mess left by parents deciding when their children will and will not attend school.