Published
4 years agoon
About 12,600 Fresno Unified students have been chronically absent this year, of whom more than a third are English learners, special education students, foster kids, and the homeless, the district reports.
The district defines chronic absence as when students are marked as being present less than 90% of their school days.
Fresno Unified reports that the overall attendance rate across the district has improved since the second week of school, when the rate was 89.8% with 4.5% of the absences due to students’ inability to connect to their online classes. By week 10, which ended on Oct. 23, the attendance rate had climbed to 93.4%, and less than 1% of the absences were chalked up to connectivity issues.
Fresno Unified’s report on chronically absent students and what the district is doing to get them back to learning is included in Wednesday’s board agenda. The public meeting will begin at 5:30 p.m. and can be viewed at http://go.fresnounified.org/ustream or on Comcast Xfinity Channel 94 and AT&T U-Verse Channel 99.
This week the Fresno Unified doubled the number of small learning groups allowed to come onto its campuses to use school internet connections and get district-provided meals. The district initiated the program in mid-October with one small group at elementary schools and two at middle and high schools.. The small groups each contain 10 students identified as being most at-risk or having the highest need.
This expansion of small groups is one way to address chronic absences, district spokeswoman Amy Idsvoog said: “Providing students with a safe and consistent place to access internet will certainly have an impact on class attendance.”
There is no waiting list for students to be added to small groups, “though sites are looking ahead and considering future student groups as we continue with our phased-in approach,” she said.
The district reports that so far this year chronic absences are sharply higher among younger students, with more than twice as many students in transitional kindergarten through third grade missing school this year compared to last year, and nearly twice as many students in fourth through sixth grades.
The district report cites two different numbers for chronically absent students, 12,597 and 12,608. Idsvoog said the data was compiled on two different days, and 11 more students were chronically absent by the later day. About 8,000 students were chronically absent last year, the district reports.
Nearly three-fourths of the chronically absent students are Hispanic, representing about 19% of the district’s Hispanic student population.
A higher percentage — 31% — of black students have been chronically absent compared with students of other races, the district report shows.
Of the 636 “no show” students this year, the district has thus far located 355: 29% had transferred to Clovis Unified, 22% to a charter school, 12% to Central Unified, 5% to private, 4% to Sanger Unified, 4% to another Valley district such as Madera, Tulare, Selma, or Fowler, 12% to another district elsewhere in California, and 12% came back to Fresno Unified.
The district reports that school and Department of Prevention and Intervention staff have invested much time and energy into tracking down absent kids, with 9,300 phone calls and 300 home visits made by school staff and 930 phone calls and 350 home visits made by prevention and intervention staffers.
Nancy Price is a multimedia journalist for GV Wire. A longtime reporter and editor who has worked for newspapers in California, Florida, Alaska, Illinois and Kansas, Nancy joined GV Wire in July 2019. She previously worked as an assistant metro editor for 13 years at The Fresno Bee. Nancy earned her bachelor's and master's degrees in journalism at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. Her hobbies include singing with the Fresno Master Chorale and volunteering with Fresno Filmworks. You can reach Nancy at 559-492-4087 or Send an Email
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John Targasian
November 5, 2020 at 10:47 am
That’s less than 1 phone call per chronically absent child…