Chronic Absence 2013-2014 Board of Education PowerPoint

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Addressing Chronic Absenteeism

2013-2014

Administrative Services

2013-2014

Elementary

Camino Real

Glen Avon

Granite Hill

Ina Arbuckle

Indian Hills

Mission Bell

Pacific Avenue

Pedley

Peralta

Rustic Lane

Sky Country

Stone Avenue

Sunnyslope

Troth Street

Van Buren

West Riverside

TOTALS

Middle Schools

Jurupa Middle

Mira Loma M S

Mission Middle

High Schools

Jurupa Valley

Patriot High

Rubidoux High

NVHS

STEPS

ALTA VISTA

RIVERCREST

Totals

1543

1993

1622

265

33

38

30

18511

Chronic Absenteeism 2013-2014

Total

Chronic

Students Absences

Enrolled By Site

740

668

733

545

614

452

399

644

50

16

29

55

37

66

29

27

657

621

545

739

734

849

603

724

10267

41

53

49

39

640

57

29

15

48

% chronically absent

5.00%

9.80%

3.95%

4.95%

8.14%

3.53%

7.26%

8.54%

8.67%

4.66%

2.75%

6.49%

5.58%

6.24%

8.12%

5.38%

1

11

6

8

8

14

7

3

6

K

6

11

8

3

3

7

102

Chronic

Absence

Kinder meetings *

0

3

3

7

0

6

5

4

2

4

1

3

6

1

4

6

55

1122

824

774

56

44

57

4.99%

5.33%

7.36%

96

107

91

31

19

6

1147

6.22%

5.36%

5.61%

11.69%

58.00%

20%

102

4

12

9

9

8

13

12

7

1st

8

17

12

8

14

2

13

12

160

Chronic

Absence

1st grade meetings*

1

2

1

6

0

1

3

2

2

4

1

4

1

1

2

2

33

4

9

1

6

7

11

8

4

2nd

6

16

10

4

6

7

4

8

111

Chronic

Absence

2nd grade meetings*

0

7

4

54

5

5

1

8

3

1

2

1

4th

5

7

1

0

3

1

6

5

8

12

7

4

2

6

3rd

1

3

5

4

3

1

7

3

77

0

2

2

2

8

3

2

9

7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th

0

28

15

22

0

28

29

35

0 0 0 0

77 54 82 54

2

6 44

31 33

26 32

12 3

2 4

1 2

46

43

33

16

11

3

65 94 78 118 152 0 55 160 33 111 0

* NOTE: Chronically absent students with known chronic health conditions were exempted from chronic absence meetings. This was a factor in the reduction of total chronic absence meetings.

Key Terms

Average Daily Attendance : The percentage of enrolled students who attend school each day.

Satisfactory Attendance: Missing 5% or less of school in an academic year.

Chronic Absence: Missing 10% or more of school in an academic year for any reason —excused or unexcused.

Severe Chronic Absence: Missing 20% or more days of school per year – approximately two months of school.

Truancy: In California, this means missing 3 days of school or being tardy more than 30 minutes without a valid excuse.

(truancy is defined by each state.)

When 90% Doesn’t Earn an “A”

Students Who Miss More Than 10% Of

School Are At Grave Risk

0-90%

91-94%

95 %+

Chronic Absence

(=>10% absence)

Warning Signs

(<10% but >5% absence)

Satisfactory Attendance

(=<5% absence)

Emergency: =>20% absence

4

Is good attendance in kindergarten really that important?

YES IT IS!!! Kindergarten is critical for future learning. Your child will be learning important skills that will “set the course” for his or her school success!

Just look at these facts:

Ability to learn – children who are absent too much (more than 10% of the time, or 18 days in a full school year) do less well in first grade. For some groups the difference is even greater. The graph shows how children who miss 10% or more school days perform much more poorly in Reading, Math, and General

Knowledge.

55

54

53

52

51

50

49

48

47

46

45

Chronic Absentees in Kindergarten had the lowest academic performance in First Grade

This is missing just one day every two weeks!

0-3.3% absent 3.3-6.6% absent 6.6-10% absent ≥10% absent

Reading Math General Knowledge

Source: Hedy Chang, Present, Engaged and Accounted for: The Critical Importance of

AddressingChronic Absence in the Early Grades

Fact: One in ten kindergarten and 1 st

grade students miss a month of school during the school year when all their absences are added up. That is critical learning being missed. Children who do not learn the building blocks and basic skills in the early grades must work much harder to stay afloat as they go on. Many never catch up.

Fact: Chronic absence is the single strongest predictor of dropping out of school before graduation. Students who drop out of school are much more likely to be poor, unemployed, have substance abuse problems, be teen parents, and be involved with the law.

Students who miss school miss a lot. They miss the social experiences and connecting that other children are having – lessons and relationships that help with fitting in and succeeding in school and life.

Missing school is stressful for children since they must learn what they missed, and also what is being taught that day. It can put them in an academic hole that they cannot climb out of.

Don’t let this happen to your child!

We know that sometimes families face barriers. Let us know what we can do to help. –

100%

Students Chronically Absent in

Kindergarten & 1

st

Grade Much Less

Likely to Read Proficiently in 3

rd

Grade

Percent Students Scoring Proficient or Advanced on 3 rd Grade

ELA Based on Attendance in Kindergarten and 1 st Grade

80%

64%

60%

40%

43%

41%

17%

20%

0%

No attendance risks

No risk

Small risk

Moderate risk

High risk

Small attendance risks Moderate attendance risks

Missed less than 5% of school in K & 1 st t

Missed 5-9% of days in both K & 1 st

5-9% of days absent in 1 year &10 % in 1 year

Missed 10% or more in K & 1 st

High attendance risks

Source: Applied Survey Research & Attendance Works (April 2011)

5

Chronically Absent 6th Graders Have

Lower Graduation Rates

Dropout Rates by Sixth Grade Attendance

(Baltimore City Public Schools, 1990-2000 Sixth Grade Cohort)

Severely

Chronically

Absent

Chronically

Absent

Not

Chronically

Absent

Source: Baltimore Education Research Consortium SY 2009-2010

9

9th Grade Attendance Predicts

Graduation for Students of All

Economic Backgrounds

Need to recolor chart

Note: This Chicago study found attendance was a stronger graduation predictor than 8th grade test scores.

Source: Allensworth & Easton, What Matters for Staying On-Track and Graduating in

Chicago Public Schools , Consortium on Chicago School Research at U of C, July 2007

10

Great attendance in

Kindergarten is the pathway to great academic success!

• MY CHILD'S ATTENDANCE GOAL:

Last year, my child was present 157 days. My child was absent 18 days ( 89 % ). My child's current attendance rate is 91% (absent 6 days out of 65.) To be ready for 1st grade, my goal is to improve my child's attendance rate by 6% (89 + 6= 95).

• TO IMPROVE MY CHILD’S ATTENDANCE I CAN COMMIT TO THE FOLLOWING:

1. Attends 174 days out of 180 days absent 6 days 96.6% attendance rate

2. 173

3. 172

7 96.1%

8 95.5%

4. 171 9 95.0%

POSSIBLE STRATEGIES TO REACH YOUR CHILD’S ATTENDANCE GOAL:

• I will keep an attendance chart at home. At the end of the week, I will reward my child for attending school every day with ______ (i.e. a visit to the park, extra video game time, a special treat).

• I will make sure my child is in bed by ____ p.m. and the alarm clock is set for ____ a.m.

• If my child consistently complains of a stomach or head ache, I will send him/her to school anyway and call the school nurse/health clerk so that he/she can check in with him/her during the school day.

• If my child has a cold but no fever (less than 100 degrees), I will send him/her to school anyway. If

I don’t have a thermometer, I will purchase or borrow one.

• I will find a relative, friend, or neighbor who can take my child to school if I can’t or if he/she misses the bus.

• If my child is absent, I will contact his/her teacher to find out how he/she can make up missed schoolwork.

• I will set medical and dental appointments for weekdays after 3:30 pm.

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