NYC finds success cutting school absenteeism

Mentors, wake-up calls to students, incentives, and weekly "student success" meetings led by principals have helped New York City significantly cut chronic absenteeism in schools, according to a new report by the Everyone Graduates Center at the Johns Hopkins University School of Education.

The report, "Meeting the Challenge of Combating Chronic Absenteeism," examines the impact of New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg's task force on truancy, chronic absenteeism, and school engagement, a program that spanned 2010 to 2013 and reached more than 60,000 students.

The study of the task force's efforts in 100 New York City public schools by Johns Hopkins researchers Robert Balfanz and Vaughan Byrnes found that students who missed at least 20 days of school a year, the definition of chronic absenteeism, had lower grades and were more likely to drop out than were students with better attendance. The researchers also found that these effects of absenteeism were reversible.

"Chronic absenteeism is an unseen force, like bacteria in a hospital, that wreaks havoc with our efforts to use our schools as pathways from poverty to adult success," says Balfanz, a research scientist and co-director of the Everyone Graduates Center. "But this report shows that once we understand the dimensions of the problem, it is possible to organize relatively low-cost and broadly reproducible responses that can prevent it from occurring and can mitigate its impacts."

The single most effective action by the task force was creating the NYC Success Mentor Corps, which paired at-risk students with school staff, retirees, social work students, AmeriCorps volunteers, and high school seniors. Students who had been chronically absent gained almost two additional weeks in school per year once they had a mentor. The attendance of some students with mentors rose by an entire month.

The task force also created an incentive program to recognize good attendance. Success was rewarded with tickets to events, special privileges at school, certificates of honor, and being singled out at school assemblies.

Absenteeism awareness was another goal of the task force, which created a campaign, "It's 9 a.m., do you know where your kids are?" that was posted on buses, subways, and metro cards. Additionally, the task force recruited celebrities, including Magic Johnson, Trey Songz, and Whoopi Goldberg, to record wake-up calls that went out last year to 30,000 students.

Researchers conclude that these cost-effective strategies that can cut absenteeism, increase attendance, and improve academic outcomes not only worked in New York City but would likely work across the country, where an estimated 5 million to 6.5 million students are not attending school regularly.

The report also found that:

  • Task force schools significantly and consistently outperformed other schools in reducing absenteeism.

  • Students in poverty at task force schools were 15 percent less likely to be chronically absent.

  • Students in temporary homeless shelters at task force schools were 31 percent less likely to be chronically absent.

  • Students who stopped being chronically absent saw academic improvement and were more likely to stay in school. They also were more likely to remain in school in the years following intervention.

Schools participating in the mayor's task force initiative significantly reduced the number of chronically absent students while increasing the number of students who attended at least 95 percent of the year.

The report's release on Nov. 20 coincided with an online summit, hosted by Bloomberg, Balfanz, and the National League of Cities, that addressed the scope of chronic absenteeism and shared the solutions other cities can adopt. "Meeting the Challenge of Combating Chronic Absenteeism: Impact of the NYC Mayor's Interagency Task Force on Chronic Absenteeism and School Attendance and Its Implications for Other Cities," by Balfanz and Byrnes, is available online at http://everyonegraduates.org.