Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you see OOB excessive absences or readies is a way they can kick you back to your homeschool.
As of this school year you can not be kicked out due to absence.
Where can I find this in writing and does it apply to all dcps and dcpcs?
https://dcps.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/dcps/page_content/attachments/FINAL%20DCPS%20Attendance%20and%20Truancy%20Policy%2008-21-18.pdf
"No student will be transferred from their school for absenteeism, including students who are attending an out of boundary school."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you see OOB excessive absences or readies is a way they can kick you back to your homeschool.
As of this school year you can not be kicked out due to absence.
Where can I find this in writing and does it apply to all dcps and dcpcs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you see OOB excessive absences or readies is a way they can kick you back to your homeschool.
As of this school year you can not be kicked out due to absence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I recall they're supposed to have the school social worker touch base with you after 10 days.
When my son was in PS-3 and had cold after cold after cold (first year in full time school) I kept him home without hesitation because I worked from home. Sometime in the spring we got a form letter from the school social worker about it, called her, and she was like "Oh yeah, sorry, those just go out. No big deal." We did start documenting each absence after that with a call and a paper letter to the office because it just felt weird.
The procedures have changed, as of this year.
1 day of unexcused absence -
Contact parent on the same day and each time a student has the equivalent of one day of unexcused absence, with daily follow-ups as necessary.18
3 days of unexcused cumulative absences -
Send 3-Day Unexcused Absence Letter to parent.
4 days of absences (excused or unexcused) -
Phone call home after four absences to discuss the student’s attendance.
5 days of unexcused cumulative absences -
Send 5-Day Unexcused Absence Letter to parent and refer student to Student Support Team (SST) for an attendance intervention conference to be held within five days of the referral. (Applicable to five unexcused absences within one term.) The SST will develop an action plan in partnership with the student and the student’s parent.
7 days of unexcused cumulative absences -
Send Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) warning letter to parent.
10 days of unexcused cumulative absences -
Student is considered chronically truant. Contact the District Child Family Services Agency (CFSA) for students aged 5-13. Refer student for follow-up attendance SST interventions for students aged 14 and older. The SST assigned to the student will notify school leader of action plan within two days of the referral.
Anonymous wrote:Bumping this—we have a family emergency out of country. I may need to take DC out of PreK for a little over a week. Will this be an issue?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have family overseas and missed more than the threshold number of days last year.
We had to have a meeting with the school social worker. We may have also gotten a letter or two, and it's possible that the language was "condescending".
Honestly? I'm fine with all of this. I can live with a visit to the school social worker and a few letters. All of this infrastructure is to protect students in very vulnerable situations and if it means we never never have another case like Relisha Rudd, I'm fine with it. Protecting those vulnerable kids is worth an hour or two of inconvenience on my part.
This! My MS child was mistakenly marked absent and I had to have a meeting with the school. I am all for this! I expect them to tell me if my kid skips class and they should expect me to come in if I am not upholding attendance on my end. Responsibility and accountability for all. Poor Relisha Rudd.
Anonymous wrote:Bumping this as my child will enter PreK3 next year. I'm trying to plan out or travel, but with aging grandparents and illness, I'm nervous about going above the threshold. Would love some feedback from current parents.
Anonymous wrote:We have family overseas and missed more than the threshold number of days last year.
We had to have a meeting with the school social worker. We may have also gotten a letter or two, and it's possible that the language was "condescending".
Honestly? I'm fine with all of this. I can live with a visit to the school social worker and a few letters. All of this infrastructure is to protect students in very vulnerable situations and if it means we never never have another case like Relisha Rudd, I'm fine with it. Protecting those vulnerable kids is worth an hour or two of inconvenience on my part.