Please
note: this is additional information pertaining to attendance regulations:
Student Handbook, page 4, under the heading: ATTENDANCE
REGULATIONS
Beginning with the
2017-18 school year, a new definition of “absent” will be used to identify students
who are chronically absent. As part of the implementation of the Every Student
Succeeds Act, districts and schools are required to report to the South
Carolina Department of Education the number of students who are chronically
absent each year. According to the United States Department of
Education’s Office of Civil Rights (OCR), an absent student is one who misses
50 percent of the instructional day for any reason and regardless of whether
the absence is excused or unexcused. In other words, students must attend class
for at least half of the instructional day to be considered present for that
day.
Using this new
definition, the OCR requires states to report the number of students in each
district and school who are absent at least 10% of the time during which they
are enrolled in a particular school or district. More specifically, students
who are enrolled in the same school for an entire academic year and miss 18 or
more days (10 percent) will be considered chronically absent. The total number of
chronically absent students will be included on district and school report
cards and reported to the OCR.
Chronic absenteeism is
not the same as truancy.
Chronic Absenteeism
|
Truancy
|
Chronically
absent: Any student in grade
K-12 who misses 50 percent or more of
the instructional day for any reason for 10 percent (or more) of the
enrollment period.
• All types of absences contribute to
chronic absenteeism:
– Excused Absences – Unexcused Absences – Suspensions
• A student is absent if he or she is not
physically on school grounds and is not participating in instruction or
instruction-related activities at an approved off-grounds location for the
school day.
|
Truant: A student between the ages 6– 17
who has accumulated unexcused absences on three consecutive days or has
accumulated a total of five or more unexcused absences during the academic
year.
• Only full-day unexcused
absences contribute to truancy.
• Excused absences and suspensions do not
affect truancy
|
Because chronic
absenteeism is associated with poor academic performance, increased dropout
rates and decreased graduation rates, districts and schools are encouraged to
make sure that parents are aware of this change.
Additional information
for parents is available at http://www.attendanceworks.org/what-works/engage-students-and-parents/ .
For more information
or training about chronic absenteeism, please contact Aveene Coleman at 803-734-3057.
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