Digital hall passes in one tap – mark a child out, clear it on return, and build a quiet record that shows a pattern before it becomes a problem.
Paper passes and mental notes don’t add up to anything. The child who leaves one lesson a week is fine; the child who leaves the same lesson every week is telling you something – but only if the moments are being counted somewhere.

One tap from the class view
Hall passes in Ten Points are issued in a single tap from the teacher’s class view. A marker shows which students are currently out of the room, and clears when they return. Every pass is recorded, so what looks like a small classroom routine quietly builds a record of movement patterns across the school.

Patterns pastoral teams can see
Frequent passes cluster around something – a subject, a time of day, a corridor, an avoidance. Because passes are recorded against the student and the lesson, heads of year can see the pattern and ask the gentler, earlier question.

A routine that protects learning time
Passes take a moment and stay out of the lesson’s way. No slips to sign, no logbook by the door – just the register the school never had.
Frequently asked questions
How do digital hall passes work in Ten Points?
Teachers issue a pass in one tap from the class view. A marker shows the student is out of the room and clears on their return, with every pass recorded.
Can we see if a student is leaving lessons frequently?
Yes. Passes are logged against the student and lesson, so patterns of persistent absence from the classroom are visible to pastoral staff.
Do hall passes slow the lesson down?
No. Issuing and clearing a pass each take a single tap from the screen the teacher already has open.