Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s pretty easy to end up with a kid who is chronically truant. My kid had two long respiratory viruses (covid and flu) that knocked out 7-8 days, then a few other colds, then marked absent for dr appt and therapist appointment. Some schools suspend liberally and mark that as absent as well. End result is my kid met the “chronically truant” status but only one of those days was discretionary (one day we tacked onto a vacation.)
Excused absences, which both illness and suspensions are, contribute to chronic absenteeism, but not truancy.
And schools should be following the law regarding suspension limits/the need to provide support, not liberally suspending (or, more commonly, sending home without following the suspension protocols).
Anonymous wrote:It’s pretty easy to end up with a kid who is chronically truant. My kid had two long respiratory viruses (covid and flu) that knocked out 7-8 days, then a few other colds, then marked absent for dr appt and therapist appointment. Some schools suspend liberally and mark that as absent as well. End result is my kid met the “chronically truant” status but only one of those days was discretionary (one day we tacked onto a vacation.)
Anonymous wrote:Our middle schooler came close to being "truant" this year due to 1) miscounted "unexcused absences" which we were told would actually be excused tardies (but surprise! weren't!), and 2) absences that we reported and requested to be excused, but which DCPS would not excuse.
Is there a real problem with chronic truancy in DCPS? Sounds plausible, sure. But are innocuous data being misreported? 100%.
Anonymous wrote:What about school buses for ES kids? At least they’d have a reliable way to get to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In SY 22-23, 43% of K-12 DC public school students were chronically absent and 37% were truant (chronically absent means that the student missed 10% of more of the school year and truant means 10 or more unexcused absences). Significantly, 60% of DC public high school students were chronically absent.
The DC Council is considering a number of bills to deal with this problem. Among other things, the bills would variously require OSSE to publish monthly absenteeism data on its website, expand the set of valid excuses for absences, provide additional funding to address chronic absenteeism, and designate schools that reach a chronic absenteeism rate of 20%+ as priority zones for the Safe Passage Safe Blocks program.
Mayor Bowser has introduced a bill to require DHS to intervene before a truant student is referred to CFSA. The bill would also direct the AG to prosecute the parents of students who have accrued 25 or more absences.
https://lims.dccouncil.gov/hearings/
Do they have data on the reason for truancy? I mean, Safe Passage sounds nice, but is safety a key cause, particularly at the high school level?
NP. It wasn't when I was in the classroom. There's no consequences for not coming to school. They know we have to give them make-up work. They also know they're starting off with 50%. All they need to do is show up periodically and do a handful of assignments to pass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In SY 22-23, 43% of K-12 DC public school students were chronically absent and 37% were truant (chronically absent means that the student missed 10% of more of the school year and truant means 10 or more unexcused absences). Significantly, 60% of DC public high school students were chronically absent.
The DC Council is considering a number of bills to deal with this problem. Among other things, the bills would variously require OSSE to publish monthly absenteeism data on its website, expand the set of valid excuses for absences, provide additional funding to address chronic absenteeism, and designate schools that reach a chronic absenteeism rate of 20%+ as priority zones for the Safe Passage Safe Blocks program.
Mayor Bowser has introduced a bill to require DHS to intervene before a truant student is referred to CFSA. The bill would also direct the AG to prosecute the parents of students who have accrued 25 or more absences.
https://lims.dccouncil.gov/hearings/
Do they have data on the reason for truancy? I mean, Safe Passage sounds nice, but is safety a key cause, particularly at the high school level?
Anonymous wrote:In SY 22-23, 43% of K-12 DC public school students were chronically absent and 37% were truant (chronically absent means that the student missed 10% of more of the school year and truant means 10 or more unexcused absences). Significantly, 60% of DC public high school students were chronically absent.
The DC Council is considering a number of bills to deal with this problem. Among other things, the bills would variously require OSSE to publish monthly absenteeism data on its website, expand the set of valid excuses for absences, provide additional funding to address chronic absenteeism, and designate schools that reach a chronic absenteeism rate of 20%+ as priority zones for the Safe Passage Safe Blocks program.
Mayor Bowser has introduced a bill to require DHS to intervene before a truant student is referred to CFSA. The bill would also direct the AG to prosecute the parents of students who have accrued 25 or more absences.
https://lims.dccouncil.gov/hearings/