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Absent from School: Understanding and Addressing Absenteeism [Pehme köide]

Edited by , Afterword by , Foreword by , Afterword by , Edited by , Foreword by
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 228x154x12 mm, kaal: 410 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2019
  • Kirjastus: Harvard Educational Publishing Group
  • ISBN-10: 1682532771
  • ISBN-13: 9781682532775
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 228x154x12 mm, kaal: 410 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2019
  • Kirjastus: Harvard Educational Publishing Group
  • ISBN-10: 1682532771
  • ISBN-13: 9781682532775
In Absent from School, Gottfried and Hutt offer a comprehensive and timely resource for educators and policy makers seeking to understand the scope, impact, and causes of chronic student absenteeism.


In Absent from School, Gottfried and Hutt offer a comprehensive and timely resource for educators and policy makers seeking to understand the scope, impact, and causes of chronic student absenteeism. The editors present a series of studies by leading researchers from a variety of disciplines that address which students are missing school and why, what roles schools themselves play in contributing to or offsetting patterns of absenteeism, and ways to assess student attendance for purposes of school accountability. The contributors examine school-based initiatives that focus on a range of issues, including transportation, student health, discipline policies, and protections for immigrant students, as well as interventions intended to improve student attendance.
 
Only in the past two or three years has chronic absenteeism become the focus of attention among policy makers, civil rights advocates, and educators. Absent from School provides the first critical, systematic look at research that can inform and guide those who are working to ensure that every child is in school and learning every day.
Foreword ix
Elaine Allensworth
Robert Balfanz
Introduction 1(14)
Michael A. Gottfried
Ethan L. Hutt
PART I Measuring Absenteeism
1 Roll Call
15(20)
Describing Chronically Absent Students, the Schools They Attend, and Implications for Accountability
Heather Hough
2 Variation in Chronic Absenteeism
35(18)
The Role of Children, Classrooms, and Schools
Kevin A. Gee
3 Attending to Attendance
53(14)
Why Data Quality and Modeling Assumptions Matter When Using Attendance as an Outcome
Shaun M. Dougherty
Joshua Childs
4 The Distributional Impacts of Student Absences on Academic Achievement
67(16)
Seth Gershenson
Jessica Roe McBean
Long Tran
PART II Policies, Programs, and Practices
5 Reinforcing Student Attendance
83(18)
Shifting Mind-Sets and Implementing Data-Driven Improvement Strategies During School Transitions
Stacy B. Ehrlich
David W. Johnson
6 Schools as Sanctuaries?
101(20)
Examining the Relationship Between Immigration Enforcement and Absenteeism Rates for Immigrant-Origin Children
Carolyn Sattin-Bajaj
Jacob Kirksey
7 Can School Buses Drive Down (Chronic) Absenteeism?
121(16)
Sarah A. Cordes
Michele Leardo
Christopher Rick
Amy Ellen Schwartz
8 The Ills of Absenteeism
137(12)
Can School-Based Health Centers Provide the Cure?
Jennifer Graves
Sarit Weisburd
Christopher Salem
9 Tackling Truancy
149(16)
Findings from a State-Level Policy Banning Suspensions for Truancy
Kaitlin Anderson
Anna J. Egalite
Jonathan N. Mills
PART III Interventions
10 Ready ... Set ... Text!
165(16)
Reducing School Absenteeism Through Parent-School Two-Way Text Messaging
Ken Smythe-Leistico
Lindsay C. Page
11 Keeping Families Front and Center
181(18)
Leveraging Our Best Ally for Ninth-Grade Attendance
Martha Abele Mac Iver
Steven B. Sheldon
12 Intervention Design Choices and Evaluation Lessons from Multisite Field Trials on Reducing Absenteeism
199(14)
Rekha Balu
13 Conclusion
213(8)
Ethan L. Hutt
Michael A. Gottfried
Afterword 221(4)
Todd Rogers
Johannes Demarzi
Notes 225(34)
Acknowledgments 259(2)
About the Editors 261(2)
About the Contributors 263(6)
Index 269
Michael Gottfried is an associate professor in the Gevirtz Graduate School of Education at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Ethan L. Hutt is an assistant professor in the Department of Teaching and Learning, Policy and Leadership at the University of Maryland, College Park.