Guess Who’s NOT Coming to School!

American students are skipping school in record numbers, a crisis that is so acute that it became the lead story in The New York Times recently, as well as the subject of the Times’s podcast series, The Daily.   The lead story is long on anecdotes, graphs, and other data. It’s also chock full of quotes from experts, but no students are heard from. No teachers either.

Another serious problem with the reporting, in my view, is the lack of context. The reporters place the blame for the epidemic of chronic absenteeism on COVID, making no mention of three other deep-rooted causes, 1) the right wing’s long campaign against ‘government schools,’ which has helped create widespread distrust of many other public institutions; 2) a decades-long obsession with standardized testing that has made many kids feel like numbers, objects to be manipulated; and 3) a mental health crisis among adolescents, caused in part by their heightened anxiety about school shootings, that makes many kids genuinely afraid to go to school. 

Let’s start at the top. Ronald Reagan routinely referred disparagingly to public schools as ‘government schools,’ meaning, of course, that they could not be trusted.  The MAGA movement has amplified that cry, politicizing education, taking over school board meetings (and actual school boards as well), driving away qualified veteran educators, and causing would-be teachers to decide to find other lines of work.  Schools that ban books and restrict discussions are not exactly welcoming environments for young people.  

Although the trend to see students in terms of their test scores probably dates back to the 1988 publication of “A Nation at Risk,” George W. Bush and Barack Obama ramped it up, big time. In other words, Democrats and Republicans are equally responsible for the second major cause of absenteeism.  Bush’s “No Child Left Behind” and Obama’s “Race to the Top” prioritized student test scores in math and English–at the expense of almost everything else.  Most public schools either reduced or eliminated extra-curricular activities like drama, journalism, and music.  Recess and free play also went by the wayside, as did ‘non-essential’ courses like foreign languages and social studies. The message to students was clear: the school cares only about my test score, not me….so why bother?

Cause #3: Yes, COVID shut down many public schools, depriving young people of the opportunities to socialize, to get accustomed to being with others and dealing with whatever issues arose, but the rash of widely-publicized school shootings–and government’s failure to address the crisis–have created another legitimate reason for students to opt out of school.  I met recently with a high school history teacher, a 17-year veteran, who told me his students regularly practice how to respond to ‘an incursion.’ Mental health challenges are genuine, widespread, and perfectly understandable, he told me.   

The next day I met with another teacher, a young woman who is just finishing her 5th year teaching 4th grade in a charter school in Brooklyn. Students at her school have learned what to do if trouble arises. She also said absenteeism is an issue, and she’s certain that it will spike dramatically in a week or two–once the state tests are over.  Both teachers are concerned about the quality of incoming teachers–the pool of talent is smaller and less impressive.  I infer from their comments that this development is a consequence of the attacks on teaching and teachers–“Who in their right mind would want to teach today?” is the question that hung in the air.

If I were reporting this story, I would do what we did in 2012, talk to young people. This school district on the Mexican border had an abysmal dropout rate, so its new superintendent went out and found kids who had dropped out and asked what it would take to get them to come back.  More challenges, he learned, and so he created opportunities for kids to earn college credits while going to high school.  A few years later, a bunch of high school seniors received both their HS diplomas and their 2-year community college degrees.  Remarkable story, and a win-win-win for everyone. Please click on the link to see what I mean.

Adults concerned about chronic absenteeism ought to be trying to get young people to want to come to school regularly, not simply ‘to attend school.’  To do that, we need to make schools interesting, challenging, and safe.  Stop treating kids as numbers (their standardized test scores).  Stop asking “How smart are you?” and ask a different question about each child: ‘How are you smart?”  

Here are four specific steps that will bring kids back:  1) Restore the full range of extra-curricular opportunities–because most kids come to school so they can do interesting stuff with their friends!  2) Homeroom in middle and high school should become an extended period, not just a quick five minutes when attendance is taken. Make daily homeroom a pressure-free time when students can catch up with friends, forge new relationships, finish homework, or even take naps.  “Home” is the operative word here.  3) Expand course offerings to include some college classes and vocational training opportunities. 

Step number 4 deserves its own paragraph!  To end chronic absenteeism, make schools safe. The first step toward safety is to acknowledge that school safety is a 3-part concept. Students deserve schools that are physically, emotionally, and intellectually safe.  Emotional safety means that bullying and cyber-bullying are not tolerated.  Intellectually safe schools celebrate curiosity.  In these schools, adults encourage students to admit when they do not understand or are confused, often by modeling that behavior. Intellectually safe schools don’t treat kids as numbers but as growing and changing individuals.  (And young people who are treated with respect are unlikely to bring their dad’s AK-47 to school.)

More can be done to bring young people back to school, but concerned local educators can take those four steps to begin the process. 

13 thoughts on “Guess Who’s NOT Coming to School!

  1. John: You hit many salient points but, one you missed, is leadership. The superintendent, in Texas, that your refer to, is an example of leadership. Great leaders create great schools. Great schools do not have an attendance problem. Today, in education, we get leadership by accident, not by design. We need to change the way we select and train education leaders. If we don’t do that, we will never improve our schools.

    Don

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  2. Over now almost 3 decades of teaching starting when I was 49 (I turn 78min May, in this mu final year of teaching), while I am considered in some ways a demanding teacher, I get kids to commit to what I ask in large part because of a commitment I make to them when I first get responsibility for them. I tell them, and I tell their parents/guardians, that in my classroom I promise they will be safe on all 3 levels. First they will be physically safe, because if they lack that, they will not learn effectively. Students who have been with me on lockdowns have seen me stand by the door with sharpened pencils, prepared to stab in the eye anyone who attempts to come into my room. Second, they will be emotionally safe, which may mean that they can get a pass out if under any emotional stress, and I absolutely will not tolerate bullying. Finally, they will be intellectually safe. Their ideas can be challenged, but not their persons. They can take intellectual risks, and if wrong they will not be demeaned or ridiculed. Perhaps it is these kinds of commitments, plus letting students correct work originally incorrect especially through misunderstanding is the reason I rarely have students fail, and most realize after a semester or a year with me how much they have grown -in knowledge of the content to be sure, but also in skill, in confidence, and often even emotionally. I have taught every grade from 7v through 12, from classes with Special Education students through college level courses. Safety on three levels – physical, emotional, and intellectual. A commitment to both challenge them and support them.

    Kenneth Bernstein aka teacherken

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    • As I understand it, students won’t receive AP college credit unless they do extremely well and then only after enrolling, so, NO, I am not referring to AP. I mean that HS and the college should have an established connection, so that students can earn credits at both institutions while in HS. If you watch my NewsHour piece, you will see what I mean. Thanks

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  3. Thanks John for raising this issue.

    MHO, there are many reasons that students do not attend school or attend rarely. There’s no single solution. One approach that has been helpful is to increase the opportunities young people have to make a difference in the world as they learn important skills. This is called service-learning.

    Shout out to Dr. David Hornbeck, who has promoted service-learning for decades.

    Examples include

    • K-3 students designing, gathering materials for and building a playground as part of learning reading, math and research skills
    • 7-12 students solving consumer problems adults refer to them as part of learning consumer protection and financial literacy.
    • High School students learning construction skills as they build homes for low income people & people experiencing homelessness.

    We’ve made some progress in promoting these approaches in Minnesota, including

    • convincing the relevant state board that all prospective educators must learn the rationale for and implementation of service-learning and project based learning
    • convincing the legislature to allocate $1 million to help create more service-learning programs in Mn that begin with issues that students identify as important to work on
    • convincing the legislature to allocated millions to help districts & charters create or expand programs in which young people build homes for low income people.

    More on these efforts is found here.  Thanks again, John.

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