Comments on: PROOF POINTS: The chronic absenteeism puzzle https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-the-chronic-absenteeism-puzzle/ Covering Innovation & Inequality in Education Thu, 22 Feb 2024 20:29:46 +0000 hourly 1 By: Doug Christensen, PHD https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-the-chronic-absenteeism-puzzle/comment-page-1/#comment-63800 Thu, 22 Feb 2024 20:29:46 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=98636#comment-63800 Schools need to be responsible for curricula and activities worthy of students time and energy. Parents need to be responsible for getting their kids there. It has to be a partnership where one party helps the other with their respective responsibilities.

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By: Jackie Blagsvedt https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-the-chronic-absenteeism-puzzle/comment-page-1/#comment-63671 Thu, 22 Feb 2024 15:31:54 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=98636#comment-63671 Dear Ms. Barshay,
I appreciate the deep data literacy dive you take us through with this article. I believe it will help leaders look more closely at and become more responsive to their attendance data.

I’m worried by the closing sentence though, “I’m not the alarm clock,” he said. “We need to have parents at the table to figure out why they’re allowing their kids to miss 30, 40, 50 days of school.”

I want to see school leaders embracing their power in advocating for parents/families. Many times parents aren’t the alarm clocks either and parents aren’t “allowing” their kids to miss schools. These parents need coaching, I needed coaching and even set up a sick day policy with my children, and now they go to school because they know the consequences of staying home when I say they are well enough to go to school. Parents also need to be able to live off of one income – this is something educators can advocate for. And even more than that, it’s probably not the alarm clocks. Students might not be missing school because they couldn’t wake up – perhaps they don’t feel safe or seen at school – this is certainly within the principal’s sphere of influence.

Yes, parents must be at the table! But don’t start the conversation by blaming them for not being at the table if you didn’t build the table with them to begin with. Family and Community Engagement is a two-way (dual-capacity) 360 degree (systemic and continuous) practice. This principal is right to want better communication and trusting relationships with parents, and this principal has some internal capacity building work to do before they will see the families they need at the table pulling up a seat.

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By: Mara Vertree https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-the-chronic-absenteeism-puzzle/comment-page-1/#comment-62971 Mon, 19 Feb 2024 20:09:54 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=98636#comment-62971 Dear Ms.Barshay,
I just read your article of Chronic Absenteeism. I was surprised by your report that only 15 percent of school leaders are concerned about this issue. As a school principal our leadership team could easily identify those students with attendance issues and clearly saw the correlation between academic struggles and absenteeism. What was just as concerning was the lack of engagement and behavior issues also associated with poor attendance.
We took on this issue by identifying the students and creating a separate safe place for them to meet monthly with the school counselors and other mentors and made it sweet by providing doughnuts!
We were able to follow the students and observe a rise in attendance, grades, and through our student survey process, an increase in their joy at being at school.
As educators we now have many data tools at the touch of our fingertips. This can be a blessing when we look to find correlations such as attendance, school engagement and academic success. My hope is that your article will encourage school leaders to use these tools to identify students, not to punish, but to provide safe and fun encouragement for students to have better attendance.
Yours truly,
Mara Vertrees

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