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Increased attention on school attendance has prompted recent concern among some families, especially parents whose children frequently miss school for medical reasons.
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Advocates warn that attendance policies can be unfair to students from low-income families and students of color, who are more likely to have their absences labeled as unexcused.
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A new dashboard will include local data on excused and unexcused absences broken down by grade and demographic information, like race and family income.
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When students miss lots of school without an excuse, it’s known as truancy — and in Indiana, it can lead to a visit from a truancy investigator.
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Last school year, 17.8 percent of Indiana students were considered chronically absent, down 1.4 percentage points from the prior year.
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Hundreds of educators, youth workers and community leaders gathered in Indianapolis to talk about how to help students who are chronically absent from school.
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Indiana schools will be required to intervene when elementary students are truant under a bill signed into law by Gov. Eric Holcomb.
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A proposal to combat truancy in the Indiana legislature raised concerns that it would push students into the juvenile justice system.
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An earlier version of the school truancy bill would have cracked down by increasing family involvement with courts.
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About 40% of Hoosier students missed 10 or more school days last year, and nearly one in five were absent for at least 18 days, according to new Indiana data.