Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You do understand that this isn't about your child that is truly sick. This is about the parents who allow their children to stay home for weeks without any sort of notification to the school. This is about the parents that take their children out of the country for weeks at a time to visit their native country. It is about the children who are actually truant. There are parents who never notify the school of why their child is not in school. They don't call, they don't sent in a note. They just ghost the school. You can understand how this can have a negative impact on the child who is not receiving an education. You can see how this is going to impact your child because when the student does return for a prolonged absence the teacher has to catch that student up.
If this was about a concern for children actually getting an education, they would have some meaningful oversight for homeschoolers, which they don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unpopular opinion but I think it's incredibly valuable for immigrant children to get a chance to visit their home country and practice a different language than English. They will learn far more doing that than they will sitting in a classroom. It's an actively good thing when that happens imo.
If they’re here for asylum doesn’t mean it was too dangerous to be in their home countries?
Yes, the vast majority of the immigrants are not legitimate asylum seekers.
Your blinders are showing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does it motivate parents? If it’s a hassle to re-enroll, won’t they just let Junior move on without school
The second goal you mention is just about getting around publishing unpleasant data. That can’t be a stated goal.
I’m still confused.
Do you really think a child who is unenrolled from school and not reenrolled elsewhere won’t have consequences?
You’re either too ignorant to engage in the conversation and need to educate yourself before you ask questions so they can be rooted in some foundational level of understanding, or you’re playing dumb to question the policy in a passive way.
I am trying to educate myself. I’ve researched the MD state rules on expulsions, the MCPS attendance policy, and asked here. What education would be useful? What consequences does a family or child face from being unenrolled?
Several posters in this thread spelled it out for you. Even in numbered bullet form. READ.
You should educate yourself. According to Maryland law. Only parents with children aged 15 or younger can be held responsible for not enrolling their children in school. Again, I fail to understand how this policy achieves any goals. Except making data look better, perhaps?
Legal Consequences
Any person with legal custody or care and control of a child who 5 years old or older and under 16, who fails to see that the child attends school or receives instruction as required by Maryland law, is guilty of a misdemeanor.
https://www.peoples-law.org/truancy
I believe past 16, they will put an ankle monitor on the kid and they’ll be tracked by the truancy officers.
So I think from 16-18, more of the consequences for not going to school starts to fall on the kids themselves and not just the parents, but there are consequences. I know this because there were a few truant kids in my kids’ high school who had the monitors on due to excessive skipping.
Which school?
And were the kids from affluent families?
DCC high school. Kids weren’t from affluent families, but some were average middle class. Some of them might have been low-income, but the I don’t know each kid’s individual story.
White?
Latino?
Black?
Asian?
Was it Kennedy? The data provided compared Kennedy a few decades ago to now, and that area had a dramatic shift in demographics.
Yes. It was Kennedy and yes, it was a mixture of black and Latin kids.
But how does this change the conversation about whether or not there are consequences for truancy?
Since I went down a research rabbit hole, it’s obvious to me that shifting demographics are fueling new issues or exacerbating issues that used to impact a tiny subset…yet mcps is (unsurprisingly) taking a widespread approach that will (let’s face it) unnecessarily worry the good parents while the checked out parents simply won’t care.
It’s not surprising that certain kids at Kennedy are on ankle monitors. Some of the Latino kids don’t even have parents in the country. They are here to work and send money home. Why should mcps perseverate over serving these kids if they have zero interest in school? I hope they actually take the bold step of kicking them out of school if they create problems or rarely show up.
This is a big issue in certain schools…and we know why. But instead of hammering the nail, mcps has opted to use a sledgehammer.
Truancy is a big problem at Kennedy and some of the demographic issues you raise do apply, but it’s also a problem at schools with majority white populations too, like B-CC: https://bcctattler.org/3237/opinion/not-so-great-expectations-a-feedback-loop-sending-b-cc-in-a-downward-spiral/
Another B-CC parent who also wishes to remain anonymous said, “If my child has a good grade in the class and isn’t going to miss anything in the class, then I’m okay with them not going.” As for the rationale behind this, she explained, “It’s honestly the culture kind of in the area. Kids take hard classes and do well in them but just don’t go to all their classes.”
So while schools with black and brown students may have higher absenteeism rates, it is a problem in white schools too, particularly as some parents enable or overlook their kids skipping class because there are no consequences for doing so or their kids are doing well enough in the class, so they don’t see the harm.
Disagree.
They cherry-picked a soundbite so they could say it isn’t just a black and brown poor thing. Letting a straight A student skip a day to recover from or prepare for rigorous exams, etc. isn’t an issue in need of intervention.
It’s ridiculous to equate many dozens of poor kids with horrible grades who routinely skip and have checked out parents with the kids taking multiple AP classes who headed to college in a year or so.
The latter will graduate and go on to college. They don’t present a threat to our community or economy.
The former? That’s a different story. That’s the problem in need of a solution.
I’m not sure why you’re digging your heels here. I conceded your point that the absenteeism issue is more pronounced for black and brown and lower income populations.
But it IS still an issue with schools with majority white populations too. Walter Johnson has a 15 percent chronic abstruse rate, according to the latest data. Is that ok? Do we as a school system or community have a standard of all of our schools having a chronic absenteeism rate of 10% or less? Or is that number more like 5%?
We all need to engage in these conversations as a school community.
https://ww2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/glance/currentyear/schools/04424.pdf
So, WJ has a FARMs rate of 17% and the black/brown student body is north of 30%.
A 15% chronic absenteeism rate in 2023 isn’t surprising.
I bet it was closer to 5% in the 1980s.
If they break it down by demographics and it’s mostly affluent whites and Asians, then we have a problem that the new hardline approach could address.
But if the problem is poor kids with checked out parents, then I don’t see how the new policy will fix it.
Will the aunt with whom the truant Latino kid is staying show up at school and rein in the kid’s behavior? Doubtful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does it motivate parents? If it’s a hassle to re-enroll, won’t they just let Junior move on without school
The second goal you mention is just about getting around publishing unpleasant data. That can’t be a stated goal.
I’m still confused.
Do you really think a child who is unenrolled from school and not reenrolled elsewhere won’t have consequences?
You’re either too ignorant to engage in the conversation and need to educate yourself before you ask questions so they can be rooted in some foundational level of understanding, or you’re playing dumb to question the policy in a passive way.
I am trying to educate myself. I’ve researched the MD state rules on expulsions, the MCPS attendance policy, and asked here. What education would be useful? What consequences does a family or child face from being unenrolled?
Several posters in this thread spelled it out for you. Even in numbered bullet form. READ.
You should educate yourself. According to Maryland law. Only parents with children aged 15 or younger can be held responsible for not enrolling their children in school. Again, I fail to understand how this policy achieves any goals. Except making data look better, perhaps?
Legal Consequences
Any person with legal custody or care and control of a child who 5 years old or older and under 16, who fails to see that the child attends school or receives instruction as required by Maryland law, is guilty of a misdemeanor.
https://www.peoples-law.org/truancy
I believe past 16, they will put an ankle monitor on the kid and they’ll be tracked by the truancy officers.
So I think from 16-18, more of the consequences for not going to school starts to fall on the kids themselves and not just the parents, but there are consequences. I know this because there were a few truant kids in my kids’ high school who had the monitors on due to excessive skipping.
Which school?
And were the kids from affluent families?
DCC high school. Kids weren’t from affluent families, but some were average middle class. Some of them might have been low-income, but the I don’t know each kid’s individual story.
White?
Latino?
Black?
Asian?
Was it Kennedy? The data provided compared Kennedy a few decades ago to now, and that area had a dramatic shift in demographics.
Yes. It was Kennedy and yes, it was a mixture of black and Latin kids.
But how does this change the conversation about whether or not there are consequences for truancy?
Since I went down a research rabbit hole, it’s obvious to me that shifting demographics are fueling new issues or exacerbating issues that used to impact a tiny subset…yet mcps is (unsurprisingly) taking a widespread approach that will (let’s face it) unnecessarily worry the good parents while the checked out parents simply won’t care.
It’s not surprising that certain kids at Kennedy are on ankle monitors. Some of the Latino kids don’t even have parents in the country. They are here to work and send money home. Why should mcps perseverate over serving these kids if they have zero interest in school? I hope they actually take the bold step of kicking them out of school if they create problems or rarely show up.
This is a big issue in certain schools…and we know why. But instead of hammering the nail, mcps has opted to use a sledgehammer.
Truancy is a big problem at Kennedy and some of the demographic issues you raise do apply, but it’s also a problem at schools with majority white populations too, like B-CC: https://bcctattler.org/3237/opinion/not-so-great-expectations-a-feedback-loop-sending-b-cc-in-a-downward-spiral/
Another B-CC parent who also wishes to remain anonymous said, “If my child has a good grade in the class and isn’t going to miss anything in the class, then I’m okay with them not going.” As for the rationale behind this, she explained, “It’s honestly the culture kind of in the area. Kids take hard classes and do well in them but just don’t go to all their classes.”
So while schools with black and brown students may have higher absenteeism rates, it is a problem in white schools too, particularly as some parents enable or overlook their kids skipping class because there are no consequences for doing so or their kids are doing well enough in the class, so they don’t see the harm.
Go read the older data from Kennedy and the county that was linked in the other truancy thread.
The issue is we used to be a majority white, majority affluent school system a number of decades ago. Chronic absenteeism existed back then, but in smaller numbers.
ICYMI: we are no longer a majority white, majority affluent student body. So why is anyone surprised that absenteeism has increased…in correlation with the increased diverse student body…especially at schools like Kennedy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does it motivate parents? If it’s a hassle to re-enroll, won’t they just let Junior move on without school
The second goal you mention is just about getting around publishing unpleasant data. That can’t be a stated goal.
I’m still confused.
Do you really think a child who is unenrolled from school and not reenrolled elsewhere won’t have consequences?
You’re either too ignorant to engage in the conversation and need to educate yourself before you ask questions so they can be rooted in some foundational level of understanding, or you’re playing dumb to question the policy in a passive way.
I am trying to educate myself. I’ve researched the MD state rules on expulsions, the MCPS attendance policy, and asked here. What education would be useful? What consequences does a family or child face from being unenrolled?
Several posters in this thread spelled it out for you. Even in numbered bullet form. READ.
You should educate yourself. According to Maryland law. Only parents with children aged 15 or younger can be held responsible for not enrolling their children in school. Again, I fail to understand how this policy achieves any goals. Except making data look better, perhaps?
Legal Consequences
Any person with legal custody or care and control of a child who 5 years old or older and under 16, who fails to see that the child attends school or receives instruction as required by Maryland law, is guilty of a misdemeanor.
https://www.peoples-law.org/truancy
I believe past 16, they will put an ankle monitor on the kid and they’ll be tracked by the truancy officers.
So I think from 16-18, more of the consequences for not going to school starts to fall on the kids themselves and not just the parents, but there are consequences. I know this because there were a few truant kids in my kids’ high school who had the monitors on due to excessive skipping.
Which school?
And were the kids from affluent families?
DCC high school. Kids weren’t from affluent families, but some were average middle class. Some of them might have been low-income, but the I don’t know each kid’s individual story.
White?
Latino?
Black?
Asian?
Was it Kennedy? The data provided compared Kennedy a few decades ago to now, and that area had a dramatic shift in demographics.
Yes. It was Kennedy and yes, it was a mixture of black and Latin kids.
But how does this change the conversation about whether or not there are consequences for truancy?
Since I went down a research rabbit hole, it’s obvious to me that shifting demographics are fueling new issues or exacerbating issues that used to impact a tiny subset…yet mcps is (unsurprisingly) taking a widespread approach that will (let’s face it) unnecessarily worry the good parents while the checked out parents simply won’t care.
It’s not surprising that certain kids at Kennedy are on ankle monitors. Some of the Latino kids don’t even have parents in the country. They are here to work and send money home. Why should mcps perseverate over serving these kids if they have zero interest in school? I hope they actually take the bold step of kicking them out of school if they create problems or rarely show up.
This is a big issue in certain schools…and we know why. But instead of hammering the nail, mcps has opted to use a sledgehammer.
Truancy is a big problem at Kennedy and some of the demographic issues you raise do apply, but it’s also a problem at schools with majority white populations too, like B-CC: https://bcctattler.org/3237/opinion/not-so-great-expectations-a-feedback-loop-sending-b-cc-in-a-downward-spiral/
Another B-CC parent who also wishes to remain anonymous said, “If my child has a good grade in the class and isn’t going to miss anything in the class, then I’m okay with them not going.” As for the rationale behind this, she explained, “It’s honestly the culture kind of in the area. Kids take hard classes and do well in them but just don’t go to all their classes.”
So while schools with black and brown students may have higher absenteeism rates, it is a problem in white schools too, particularly as some parents enable or overlook their kids skipping class because there are no consequences for doing so or their kids are doing well enough in the class, so they don’t see the harm.
Disagree.
They cherry-picked a soundbite so they could say it isn’t just a black and brown poor thing. Letting a straight A student skip a day to recover from or prepare for rigorous exams, etc. isn’t an issue in need of intervention.
It’s ridiculous to equate many dozens of poor kids with horrible grades who routinely skip and have checked out parents with the kids taking multiple AP classes who headed to college in a year or so.
The latter will graduate and go on to college. They don’t present a threat to our community or economy.
The former? That’s a different story. That’s the problem in need of a solution.
I’m not sure why you’re digging your heels here. I conceded your point that the absenteeism issue is more pronounced for black and brown and lower income populations.
But it IS still an issue with schools with majority white populations too. Walter Johnson has a 15 percent chronic abstruse rate, according to the latest data. Is that ok? Do we as a school system or community have a standard of all of our schools having a chronic absenteeism rate of 10% or less? Or is that number more like 5%?
We all need to engage in these conversations as a school community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does it motivate parents? If it’s a hassle to re-enroll, won’t they just let Junior move on without school
The second goal you mention is just about getting around publishing unpleasant data. That can’t be a stated goal.
I’m still confused.
Do you really think a child who is unenrolled from school and not reenrolled elsewhere won’t have consequences?
You’re either too ignorant to engage in the conversation and need to educate yourself before you ask questions so they can be rooted in some foundational level of understanding, or you’re playing dumb to question the policy in a passive way.
I am trying to educate myself. I’ve researched the MD state rules on expulsions, the MCPS attendance policy, and asked here. What education would be useful? What consequences does a family or child face from being unenrolled?
Several posters in this thread spelled it out for you. Even in numbered bullet form. READ.
You should educate yourself. According to Maryland law. Only parents with children aged 15 or younger can be held responsible for not enrolling their children in school. Again, I fail to understand how this policy achieves any goals. Except making data look better, perhaps?
Legal Consequences
Any person with legal custody or care and control of a child who 5 years old or older and under 16, who fails to see that the child attends school or receives instruction as required by Maryland law, is guilty of a misdemeanor.
https://www.peoples-law.org/truancy
I believe past 16, they will put an ankle monitor on the kid and they’ll be tracked by the truancy officers.
So I think from 16-18, more of the consequences for not going to school starts to fall on the kids themselves and not just the parents, but there are consequences. I know this because there were a few truant kids in my kids’ high school who had the monitors on due to excessive skipping.
Which school?
And were the kids from affluent families?
DCC high school. Kids weren’t from affluent families, but some were average middle class. Some of them might have been low-income, but the I don’t know each kid’s individual story.
White?
Latino?
Black?
Asian?
Was it Kennedy? The data provided compared Kennedy a few decades ago to now, and that area had a dramatic shift in demographics.
Yes. It was Kennedy and yes, it was a mixture of black and Latin kids.
But how does this change the conversation about whether or not there are consequences for truancy?
Since I went down a research rabbit hole, it’s obvious to me that shifting demographics are fueling new issues or exacerbating issues that used to impact a tiny subset…yet mcps is (unsurprisingly) taking a widespread approach that will (let’s face it) unnecessarily worry the good parents while the checked out parents simply won’t care.
It’s not surprising that certain kids at Kennedy are on ankle monitors. Some of the Latino kids don’t even have parents in the country. They are here to work and send money home. Why should mcps perseverate over serving these kids if they have zero interest in school? I hope they actually take the bold step of kicking them out of school if they create problems or rarely show up.
This is a big issue in certain schools…and we know why. But instead of hammering the nail, mcps has opted to use a sledgehammer.
Truancy is a big problem at Kennedy and some of the demographic issues you raise do apply, but it’s also a problem at schools with majority white populations too, like B-CC: https://bcctattler.org/3237/opinion/not-so-great-expectations-a-feedback-loop-sending-b-cc-in-a-downward-spiral/
Another B-CC parent who also wishes to remain anonymous said, “If my child has a good grade in the class and isn’t going to miss anything in the class, then I’m okay with them not going.” As for the rationale behind this, she explained, “It’s honestly the culture kind of in the area. Kids take hard classes and do well in them but just don’t go to all their classes.”
So while schools with black and brown students may have higher absenteeism rates, it is a problem in white schools too, particularly as some parents enable or overlook their kids skipping class because there are no consequences for doing so or their kids are doing well enough in the class, so they don’t see the harm.
Disagree.
They cherry-picked a soundbite so they could say it isn’t just a black and brown poor thing. Letting a straight A student skip a day to recover from or prepare for rigorous exams, etc. isn’t an issue in need of intervention.
It’s ridiculous to equate many dozens of poor kids with horrible grades who routinely skip and have checked out parents with the kids taking multiple AP classes who headed to college in a year or so.
The latter will graduate and go on to college. They don’t present a threat to our community or economy.
The former? That’s a different story. That’s the problem in need of a solution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does it motivate parents? If it’s a hassle to re-enroll, won’t they just let Junior move on without school
The second goal you mention is just about getting around publishing unpleasant data. That can’t be a stated goal.
I’m still confused.
Do you really think a child who is unenrolled from school and not reenrolled elsewhere won’t have consequences?
You’re either too ignorant to engage in the conversation and need to educate yourself before you ask questions so they can be rooted in some foundational level of understanding, or you’re playing dumb to question the policy in a passive way.
I am trying to educate myself. I’ve researched the MD state rules on expulsions, the MCPS attendance policy, and asked here. What education would be useful? What consequences does a family or child face from being unenrolled?
Several posters in this thread spelled it out for you. Even in numbered bullet form. READ.
You should educate yourself. According to Maryland law. Only parents with children aged 15 or younger can be held responsible for not enrolling their children in school. Again, I fail to understand how this policy achieves any goals. Except making data look better, perhaps?
Legal Consequences
Any person with legal custody or care and control of a child who 5 years old or older and under 16, who fails to see that the child attends school or receives instruction as required by Maryland law, is guilty of a misdemeanor.
https://www.peoples-law.org/truancy
I believe past 16, they will put an ankle monitor on the kid and they’ll be tracked by the truancy officers.
So I think from 16-18, more of the consequences for not going to school starts to fall on the kids themselves and not just the parents, but there are consequences. I know this because there were a few truant kids in my kids’ high school who had the monitors on due to excessive skipping.
Which school?
And were the kids from affluent families?
DCC high school. Kids weren’t from affluent families, but some were average middle class. Some of them might have been low-income, but the I don’t know each kid’s individual story.
White?
Latino?
Black?
Asian?
Was it Kennedy? The data provided compared Kennedy a few decades ago to now, and that area had a dramatic shift in demographics.
Yes. It was Kennedy and yes, it was a mixture of black and Latin kids.
But how does this change the conversation about whether or not there are consequences for truancy?
Since I went down a research rabbit hole, it’s obvious to me that shifting demographics are fueling new issues or exacerbating issues that used to impact a tiny subset…yet mcps is (unsurprisingly) taking a widespread approach that will (let’s face it) unnecessarily worry the good parents while the checked out parents simply won’t care.
It’s not surprising that certain kids at Kennedy are on ankle monitors. Some of the Latino kids don’t even have parents in the country. They are here to work and send money home. Why should mcps perseverate over serving these kids if they have zero interest in school? I hope they actually take the bold step of kicking them out of school if they create problems or rarely show up.
This is a big issue in certain schools…and we know why. But instead of hammering the nail, mcps has opted to use a sledgehammer.
Truancy is a big problem at Kennedy and some of the demographic issues you raise do apply, but it’s also a problem at schools with majority white populations too, like B-CC: https://bcctattler.org/3237/opinion/not-so-great-expectations-a-feedback-loop-sending-b-cc-in-a-downward-spiral/
Another B-CC parent who also wishes to remain anonymous said, “If my child has a good grade in the class and isn’t going to miss anything in the class, then I’m okay with them not going.” As for the rationale behind this, she explained, “It’s honestly the culture kind of in the area. Kids take hard classes and do well in them but just don’t go to all their classes.”
So while schools with black and brown students may have higher absenteeism rates, it is a problem in white schools too, particularly as some parents enable or overlook their kids skipping class because there are no consequences for doing so or their kids are doing well enough in the class, so they don’t see the harm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does it motivate parents? If it’s a hassle to re-enroll, won’t they just let Junior move on without school
The second goal you mention is just about getting around publishing unpleasant data. That can’t be a stated goal.
I’m still confused.
Do you really think a child who is unenrolled from school and not reenrolled elsewhere won’t have consequences?
You’re either too ignorant to engage in the conversation and need to educate yourself before you ask questions so they can be rooted in some foundational level of understanding, or you’re playing dumb to question the policy in a passive way.
I am trying to educate myself. I’ve researched the MD state rules on expulsions, the MCPS attendance policy, and asked here. What education would be useful? What consequences does a family or child face from being unenrolled?
Several posters in this thread spelled it out for you. Even in numbered bullet form. READ.
You should educate yourself. According to Maryland law. Only parents with children aged 15 or younger can be held responsible for not enrolling their children in school. Again, I fail to understand how this policy achieves any goals. Except making data look better, perhaps?
Legal Consequences
Any person with legal custody or care and control of a child who 5 years old or older and under 16, who fails to see that the child attends school or receives instruction as required by Maryland law, is guilty of a misdemeanor.
https://www.peoples-law.org/truancy
I believe past 16, they will put an ankle monitor on the kid and they’ll be tracked by the truancy officers.
So I think from 16-18, more of the consequences for not going to school starts to fall on the kids themselves and not just the parents, but there are consequences. I know this because there were a few truant kids in my kids’ high school who had the monitors on due to excessive skipping.
Which school?
And were the kids from affluent families?
DCC high school. Kids weren’t from affluent families, but some were average middle class. Some of them might have been low-income, but the I don’t know each kid’s individual story.
White?
Latino?
Black?
Asian?
Was it Kennedy? The data provided compared Kennedy a few decades ago to now, and that area had a dramatic shift in demographics.
Yes. It was Kennedy and yes, it was a mixture of black and Latin kids.
But how does this change the conversation about whether or not there are consequences for truancy?
Since I went down a research rabbit hole, it’s obvious to me that shifting demographics are fueling new issues or exacerbating issues that used to impact a tiny subset…yet mcps is (unsurprisingly) taking a widespread approach that will (let’s face it) unnecessarily worry the good parents while the checked out parents simply won’t care.
It’s not surprising that certain kids at Kennedy are on ankle monitors. Some of the Latino kids don’t even have parents in the country. They are here to work and send money home. Why should mcps perseverate over serving these kids if they have zero interest in school? I hope they actually take the bold step of kicking them out of school if they create problems or rarely show up.
This is a big issue in certain schools…and we know why. But instead of hammering the nail, mcps has opted to use a sledgehammer.
Truancy is a big problem at Kennedy and some of the demographic issues you raise do apply, but it’s also a problem at schools with majority white populations too, like B-CC: https://bcctattler.org/3237/opinion/not-so-great-expectations-a-feedback-loop-sending-b-cc-in-a-downward-spiral/
Another B-CC parent who also wishes to remain anonymous said, “If my child has a good grade in the class and isn’t going to miss anything in the class, then I’m okay with them not going.” As for the rationale behind this, she explained, “It’s honestly the culture kind of in the area. Kids take hard classes and do well in them but just don’t go to all their classes.”
So while schools with black and brown students may have higher absenteeism rates, it is a problem in white schools too, particularly as some parents enable or overlook their kids skipping class because there are no consequences for doing so or their kids are doing well enough in the class, so they don’t see the harm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does it motivate parents? If it’s a hassle to re-enroll, won’t they just let Junior move on without school
The second goal you mention is just about getting around publishing unpleasant data. That can’t be a stated goal.
I’m still confused.
Do you really think a child who is unenrolled from school and not reenrolled elsewhere won’t have consequences?
You’re either too ignorant to engage in the conversation and need to educate yourself before you ask questions so they can be rooted in some foundational level of understanding, or you’re playing dumb to question the policy in a passive way.
I am trying to educate myself. I’ve researched the MD state rules on expulsions, the MCPS attendance policy, and asked here. What education would be useful? What consequences does a family or child face from being unenrolled?
Several posters in this thread spelled it out for you. Even in numbered bullet form. READ.
You should educate yourself. According to Maryland law. Only parents with children aged 15 or younger can be held responsible for not enrolling their children in school. Again, I fail to understand how this policy achieves any goals. Except making data look better, perhaps?
Legal Consequences
Any person with legal custody or care and control of a child who 5 years old or older and under 16, who fails to see that the child attends school or receives instruction as required by Maryland law, is guilty of a misdemeanor.
https://www.peoples-law.org/truancy
I believe past 16, they will put an ankle monitor on the kid and they’ll be tracked by the truancy officers.
So I think from 16-18, more of the consequences for not going to school starts to fall on the kids themselves and not just the parents, but there are consequences. I know this because there were a few truant kids in my kids’ high school who had the monitors on due to excessive skipping.
Which school?
And were the kids from affluent families?
DCC high school. Kids weren’t from affluent families, but some were average middle class. Some of them might have been low-income, but the I don’t know each kid’s individual story.
White?
Latino?
Black?
Asian?
Was it Kennedy? The data provided compared Kennedy a few decades ago to now, and that area had a dramatic shift in demographics.
Yes. It was Kennedy and yes, it was a mixture of black and Latin kids.
But how does this change the conversation about whether or not there are consequences for truancy?
Since I went down a research rabbit hole, it’s obvious to me that shifting demographics are fueling new issues or exacerbating issues that used to impact a tiny subset…yet mcps is (unsurprisingly) taking a widespread approach that will (let’s face it) unnecessarily worry the good parents while the checked out parents simply won’t care.
It’s not surprising that certain kids at Kennedy are on ankle monitors. Some of the Latino kids don’t even have parents in the country. They are here to work and send money home. Why should mcps perseverate over serving these kids if they have zero interest in school? I hope they actually take the bold step of kicking them out of school if they create problems or rarely show up.
This is a big issue in certain schools…and we know why. But instead of hammering the nail, mcps has opted to use a sledgehammer.
Another B-CC parent who also wishes to remain anonymous said, “If my child has a good grade in the class and isn’t going to miss anything in the class, then I’m okay with them not going.” As for the rationale behind this, she explained, “It’s honestly the culture kind of in the area. Kids take hard classes and do well in them but just don’t go to all their classes.”