ESSA's focus on chronic absenteeism breeds variety of district strategies

The Every Student Succeeds Act of 2015 requires states, for the first time, to report chronic absenteeism rates, shifting how states think about attendance by forcing districts to not let individual students get lost in average daily attendance numbers, District Administration reports.In light of ESSA, nearly 70% of states now use “chronic absenteeism” metrics in their federally mandated accountability plans as an indicator of success, and researchers and advocates argue that chronic absenteeism can impact literacy, making it harder for students to pass classes and ultimately graduate.In the 2015-16 school year — the most recent for which federal data is available roughly 8 million public school students (over 15% of those enrolled in schools) were considered "chronically absent," federally defined as missing 15 days of school in a year.Under ESSA, many states define "chronic absenteeism" as missing 18 days in a 180-day school year, as noted by District Administration. The greater focus on chronic absenteeism is leading districts across the country to try all sorts of methods to get kids to school, ranging from mailing parents informational letters to offering counseling and support services.Among specific examples: Meriden Public Schools in Connecticut has administrators and specialists meeting weekly and monitoring attendance, with teams reaching out when a student has missed three days, or immediately if the student is someone who has an issue with chronic absenteeism.

Spotlight

Other News

Dom Nicastro | April 03, 2020

Read More

Dom Nicastro | April 03, 2020

Read More

Dom Nicastro | April 03, 2020

Read More

Dom Nicastro | April 03, 2020

Read More

Spotlight

Resources