American schools have a chronic absentee problem

Street Knowledge

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American schools have a chronic absentee problem
American schools have a chronic absentee problem

education.jpg

If showing up is half the battle, a lot of American schoolchildren are in trouble.

A new analysis of data collected by the Education Department’s Office of Civil Rights from the 2013-14 school year shows that more than 6.5 million students, or about 13 percent in grades K-12, missed 15 or more days of school.

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The study revealed that instances of chronic absenteeism are found in almost every school district, but that half of the nation’s chronically absent students were found in just 4 percent of districts.

The report, by Attendance Works, a national educational initiative that looks at the relationship between attendance and outcomes, and the Everyone Graduates Center at Johns Hopkins University School of Education, also found that the problem of chronic absenteeism disproportionately affected African American, Native American, Pacific Islander and Latino students, as well as students with learning disabilities.

The scope of the absenteeism matters “because chronic absence is really a proven early indicator of academic risk starting as early as preschool and kindergarten,” Hedy Chang, executive director of Attendance Works, said in a conference call. “By middle and high school, it is a surefire predictor of kids being on the path to drop out. And if it reaches high levels, the classroom churn can affect the learning of all the students in the classroom, not just those who are chronically absent.”

[Chronic absenteeism is contributing to academic gaps]

The study set out to map where the chronic absentee students are located, how they are concentrated and the characteristics of districts with high numbers or concentrations of students who regularly miss school.

Among the most harshly affected areas were poor, urban school districts such as Philadelphia, Baltimore, Milwaukee, Cleveland and Detroit, where more than a third of all students were chronically absent. Smaller, post-industrial cities such as Buffalo and Utica, N.Y., were also hard hit, with absentee rates often topping 50 percent.

“These are all places that had concentrations of intergenerational poverty and a web of systematic challenges that just make it more difficult to come to school: poor housing, poor access to health [care], too much exposure to violence, greater exposure to environmental pollutants,” said Robert Balfanz, director of the Everyone Graduates Center.

A surprising discovery for researchers was the number of suburban districts considered mostly affluent and successful that were also hard hit by absenteeism, including Montgomery County, Md., and Fairfax County, Va.

Both were among the top 15 school districts in the country in total number of chronically absent students. They are much larger than many other school districts and have a growing number of low-income residents.

Poor, rural districts with higher white populations also had high rates of chronic absenteeism, though because the districts were smaller, fewer students were affected.

Until recently, chronic absenteeism was overlooked as a factor in performance and student outcomes, said Chang, adding that she hopes it is now recognized as a deciding element.

“All the best instruction in classrooms just doesn’t make a difference in classrooms if kids aren’t there to benefit from it,” she said. “Most people do not realize that just missing two days a month can throw you off track for academic success.”

For the researchers, understanding the absentee data is essential in helping form solutions appropriate to each district.

“Every district, every state has to know the size and concentration of their chronic absence problem and know how severe it is,” Chang said, “because that information will help them think about targeting of resources. If you know where your chronic absenteeism is happening, it can allow you to think about how you want to bring in other community partners to solve the problem.”
 

Shogun

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I can attest to this.
I would argue it more a function of American culture not valuing education in general.
 

MJ Truth

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I can attest to this.
I would argue it more a function of American culture not valuing education in general.
With the bullshyt education/indoctrination from American schools you can understand why.
 

Shogun

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With the bullshyt education/indoctrination from American schools you can understand why.
Nah, that's a cop out. The Common Core emphasizes literacy and the ability to gather information on your own and draw your own conclusions at the expense of rote information delivery. Also, the fact that American culture doesnt value education makes indoctrination that much easier. With the internet, and all the other resources at our disposal, there's no excuse to even allow yourself to be "indoctrinated" any more.
 

Wild self

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Blame the teachers for making the subject matter disengaging. On top of the kids seeing how they ain't gonna get jobs after graduating from college anyway....

Anarchy about to break out. Expect more Columbine incidents as long as teachers make school such a traumatizing place to be.
 

Shogun

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Blame the teachers for making the subject matter disengaging. On top of the kids seeing how they ain't gonna get jobs after graduating from college anyway....

Anarchy about to break out. Expect more Columbine incidents as long as teachers make school such a traumatizing place to be.
You might also consider blaming parents for taking no role in their child's education and not instilling the value in it to them.
If you're only engaging in education for monetary gain then you've lost already.
 

Wild self

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You might also consider blaming parents for taking no role in their child's education and not instilling the value in it to them.
If you're only engaging in education for monetary gain then you've lost already.

Their kids. Kids, in whatever they do, must ENJOY learning. If not, they do anything not to learn. They human beings too.

Both the parents and teachers need to understand that. If not, just expect more drone minded kids that don't speak out against corrupt authority figures and expect more injustice in the world. It all starts at school and at home.
 

Shogun

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Their kids. Kids, in whatever they do, must ENJOY learning. If not, they do anything not to learn. They human beings too.

Both the parents and teachers need to understand that. If not, just expect more drone minded kids that don't speak out against corrupt authority figures and expect more injustice in the world. It all starts at school and at home.
Agreed. My point is that if our culture was one that valued education they may enjoy it more.
A lack of interest in education results in susceptibility to drone like behavior.
 

ExodusNirvana

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Nah, that's a cop out. The Common Core emphasizes literacy and the ability to gather information on your own and draw your own conclusions at the expense of rote information delivery. Also, the fact that American culture doesnt value education makes indoctrination that much easier. With the internet, and the all the other resources at our disposal, there's no excuse to even allow yourself to be "indoctrinated" any more.
Basically.

The shyt starts in the home. Parents are not fostering an environment where kids thirst for knowledge.

Even in HS I got the basics of everything I needed in life today and from that sought out additional knowledge via the internet and used it to come to my own conclusions and build my own knowledge and expertise on certain topics.

The kids today have more than I did and yet very few of them truly utilize it
 

ZEB WALTON

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When i was in school you were allowed to miss 18 days before they failed you

I made sure wvwry year i miased 18 days.

Sometikes i would just take a week off cuz i felt like it. Fridays. Mondays.

fukk if i could do the same with work i would lol
 
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