Student attendance rate rising
Marisa O’Neil
An Orange County Grand Jury report released Thursday found that the
school district’s truancy levels are improving, but officials need to
better explain the policy on absentee students to parents.
The report, called “Combating Truancy in Orange County,” makes
recommendations to each district, including Newport-Mesa Unified,
which has shown a recent decrease in truancy levels.
In 1999-2000, according to the report, attendance levels in the
district stood at 93%. Last year, the levels increased to a 95%
attendance rate.
The grand jury also noted that Newport Mesa Unified School
District’s website provided an “inadequate treatment of attendance
matters and lack of explicit expectations for students’ attendance.”
Capistrano and Orange unified school districts both got high marks
for theirs. The grand jury recommended the district make improvements
to its website, something Supt. Robert Barbot said is already in
process.
“We’re already improving the Web page,” he said. “We want it to be
the best in the county.”
One plan district officials are working on to deal with truancy is
an alternative school for grades five through eight.
“We want to take those fifth- or sixth-graders and get them
refocused on school,” said Mike Murphy, director of student services
through the district.
The grand jury’s recommendations were a response to California
Department of Education information released in 1995 noting truancy
as a powerful predictor of juvenile-delinquent behavior.
Also recommended in the report was that district representatives
attend the monthly county School Attendance Review Board meetings.
Newport-Mesa Unified School District has its own monthly review
board, made up of district administrators, school board members,
probation officers and a parent liaison. They hold meetings with
parents, school principals and students facing discipline.
Murphy said the district will consider attending the county
meetings, which are more “philosophical and procedural” and don’t
handle student discipline. But much of the information in such
meetings mirrors items covered in other county meetings, he said.
When a student does not come to school, Murphy said, an automatic
dialer calls the parents’ home to notify them of the absence. If the
unexcused absences continue, a letter is sent home.
If they continue after second and third warning letters, the
student and parent appear before the review board and make up a
contract agreeing to attend school. Probation officers are contacted
if that fails, and the district attorney gets involved only as a last
resort, Murphy said.
This year, 23 students have faced the review board, six have gone
to probation and one is facing charges through the district
attorney’s office.
Parents of habitual truants can also face legal penalties.
“A lot of parents try to do everything they can to get their child
to school,” Barbot said. “Our goal is to get the child back in
school, not punish the parents.”
School programs like Renaissance seek to reward good attendance
and behavior with T-shirts and other incentives, Murphy said. And
counselors such as research advocate Pepe Montenegro get involved
with parents and students to find the root of the problem.
“We want to know ‘What’s the problem? What can we do to get it to
change? What can we do to help you not repeat the problem?’” he said.
The district did not supply data on habitual truants for the
report because they have not kept track of such things, Murphy said.
Starting next school year, the federal No Child Left Behind Act will
require all districts to do so.
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