Chapter 2
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
studies gathered from both published and unpublished materials and from
RESEARCH LITERATURE
The aim of this study was to examine the direct and indirect relationship
regulation), family factors (parents’ educational level and income), and academic
achievement in structural equation model. Four hundred and twenty three high
school students participated in the study. The findings revealed that student
in respect to parents’ educational level and income. Results from SEM analyses
noticed that personal and family factors significantly predict previous and current
attention focused on this issue has been inadequate. Poor student attendance
has far reaching effects on the individual, the school, and society in general. The
2003). Although many schools realize the importance of this issue, educational
researchers have not consistently given this topic the attention it deserves
attendance rates have been successful, the methodologies used have had
continues to be the goal of school districts across the nation for over a
and maintain student’s daily attendance and even fewer studies explore how
goal. Corville and Smith, (1995) state that “Despite the long history of
concern over student attendance, the issue has received relatively little attention
researchers have mainly focused on students who drop out of high school before
receiving their high school diploma. Even though a great deal of research exits
students who dropout points to early detection of truancy in their lives before
researchers should first investigate the early warning signs in students behavior
difficulties at home and or in school at a very early age. Research has shown
that students who eventually drop out of school are absent more often than
other students beginning as early as the first grade. As the student gets older
students from dropping out of high school might be better spent on identifying
early warning signs of truancy at the elementary and middle school level.
absenteeism can have a negative impact on the student and school. Students
who are not in school are not learning and are not being adequately prepared to
tests than their more frequently absent peers” (Lamdin, 1998). If schools
across the nation are being met with the challenge of making adequate yearly
To deal with the issue of truancy at the James P. Timilty Middle School
students have been identified with five or more absences. The identified
students prior and current standardized test scores will be reviewed. Forty-one
six, seventh and eighth grade students were identified with attendance concerns.
A contract will be made with the forty-one students and weekly positive rewards
will be discussed with students for coming to school everyday on time. The
school and a yellow card will be filed which will alert the attendance officer. In
the past my buildings response to filing yellow attendance cards has been slow,
that the process can be handled expeditiously with students being monitored and
frequent phone calls home to alert and inform parents of a student’s absence
from school.
Historically, schools have always held the student accountable for truant
behavior. Corville-Smith, (1995) and Hoyle (1998) state that “Truant and
not contact families until the problem was so severe that the student was failing
their courses. Also research shows that the learning environment of an entire
schools receive funds by the population they have attending school on a regular
basis. If Districts and school attendance rates are low, educational programs
and resources are in jeopardy of being cut. Also, in some locations student
requirements are set and monitored for rating (Maryland State Department
of Education, 1999)
Studies investigating family practice have suggested that “not all parental
involvement activities are associated with attendance” (Lee, 1994) for example;
parent involvement that requires “checking homework and reading with a child is
associated with improved report card grades, achievement scores, and subject-
specific skills” (Epstein 1991; Epstein, Simon, & Salinas, 1997; Muller,
McNeal, 1999). Research shows that some parent activities are more likely
than others to affect attendance. Furthermore studies show that schools who
want to increase daily attendance need to reach out and work with parents to
Sklar and Baker (2000) reported that over “90% of the school districts they
surveyed had at least one policy supporting parental involvement”. Epstein and
her colleagues have been working with schools, school districts, and the state
that frequent school absenteeism especially affects children with low well-being
and children from homes with a poor cooperation with school. Among pupils with
especially problematic absenteeism from school – i.e. pupils who are absent
more than 10 % of all school hours – you find a range of specific characteristics.
The children often have divorced parents, are pupils in the lower secondary
school, have a lower academic level, attend more often special classes, have a
class participate, can’t raise questions about any confusion regarding topics.
Can’t clear the concepts, Poor participation in tutorial discussion; miss the chance
of small group discussion within the class. They neglect much value able
information which students can gain in class. It leads to poor coordination with
teachers, poor coordination with their class mates in their group studies. Also
group assignments and projects. Unable to update for their assignments, unable
to take the guideline about preparing the assignments, Absenteeism leads the
students to drop out graded activities. Poor performances in class quiz which
lead to poor GPA. Unable to prepare and the assignments on due dates which
badly effect the GPA of students. Poor performance during exams leads to poor
GPA that’s why they have to repeat the session or drop out from the university.
This means that students that miss their class will not have the opportunity to
foster their learning and often compensated with poor grades. Kamla Raj quoted
in his article, Bowen (2005), have established that students who attend classes
more regularly seem to be more successful in their studies than those who
regularly absent. In addition, students that attend class regularly are more likely
important factors which impact on the assembly line function in the development
students. Empirical evidences confirm that absenteeism produce the high level of
relative. The only way of measuring the learning ability of students is class
is one of fundamental unit in the class (Moore, Armstrong et al. 2008). Due
to absenteeism teacher have to reteach lesion take instructional time away from
students those who attend regular classes. They spend extra time over absentee
1996). Student miss valuable information when they are absent from classes.
They also missed the interaction lecturer and benefits of specific examples which
are used to clarify the difficult concepts. They valuable information cannot be
students which can be reason of decreasing the grades and in the result of this
the students may get failed and they have to repeat same year level.
Performance of students becomes prominent and effective when they attend the
classes on regular basis and it positive impacts on the performance. Student who
are attending the classes on regular basis, they get higher grades and marks in
the examination than those students who got absent from classes.
student is absent from class, he or she will miss the opportunity to learn new
techniques. If he missed the class there is chance of missing study material and
misses the opportunity in the examination to get high grade. Students who
attend the regular classes get high marks as compare to absent students
academic session. Lecture and tutorials provide a policy where students interact
with the teachers, observe them and differentiate them as role models. Low
attendance hence may affect this process and obstruct their professional growth.
lectures cannot be denied. Good attendance is maybe the most important and
direct sign of the student’s perception of the effectiveness and usefulness of the
lectures delivered. Teachers with good teaching skills deliver lectures which are
organized and structured; have good communication skills which attract students
out from the University. It is indicating by one author that absenteeism is act as
crime which is more commonly among the student who got low grades, have
spotted attendance and they dropped from class (Robbins and Coulter 2007)
It is also given by one author, students who missed the class on specific date,
they are more likely to respond wrongly to question related to material covered
in that day than those student who were present. It is given in the hypothesis
that there is correlation between the students learning which had inquired
relation between the course performance and absenteeism in most of the studies
(Marburger 2001).
Student miss valuable information when they are absent from classes.
They also missed the interaction lecturer and benefits of specific examples which
are used to clarify the difficult concepts. They valuable information cannot be
According to PNC rule learners are likely to maintain 100% attendance in all
15% (collective) of classes. If learners miss more than 15% (collective) per
responsibility of the learners to catch up for the missed inside of the class if
Rodgers (2001) found that attendance has a small but statistically significant
and classes and the relationship with exam performance in a sample of 368 first
year economics students, finding that hours worked and travel time are the main
determinants of class attendance, and that the late, in turn, has a positive and
diminishing marginal effect on grade. Among studies who reach less robust
Ubogu (2004) says illness, financial difficulties, age, social rank, geographical
region, attitudes of teachers, weak school management, high education cost and
weather condition can cause absenteeism. Mervilde (1981) also reveals that;
family health or financial concerns, poor school environment, drug and alcohol
education are all conditions that can cause a child not to attend school.
Literature review shows that students' absenteeism can be grouped into these
(Mizelle, 1992).
who must rely on attendance for state aid, to attendance officers, home school
counselors, and law enforcement officials who must contact parents and locate
large urban school district, and in particular, the specific school in which I am
employed. For the purpose of this paper, truancy will be defined as consecutive
illegal absences from class or school. The purpose of the research is to develop a
verify the causes of truancy in my school and compare these results with teacher
opinions of the same causes. The final objective is to identify how teachers feel
about truancy and realize what, or how much time the teachers are willing to
kindergarten. That said, almost no empirical research has examined the effects
of chronic absenteeism on student outcomes. This study addresses this
of kindergarten students from the 2010–2011 school year, this study evaluates
outcomes. The findings suggest that chronic absenteeism reduces math and
would correspond to about 18 days of school missed each year. In some cities,
that rate is considerably higher, with Detroit topping the list at 57.3 percent of
The precocious teen who’s too cool for school earning high marks despite
youth for whom success comes easy.Too bad it’s largely a work of fiction that
belies a much harsher reality: Missing just two days a month of school for any
reason exposes kids to a cascade of academic setbacks, from lower reading and
math scores in the third grade to higher risks of dropping out of high school,
research suggests.
students who are chronically absent, half attend just 4 percent of the nation’s
school districts and 12 percent of the nation’s schools. Nearly nine in 10 districts
report chronically absent students, based on data from the 2013-14 school year,
a figure that some experts believe is an undercount. The report defines chronic
Some districts with high levels of chronic absence have more resources
than others. Chang and Balfanz’s research shows that affluent suburban districts,
post some of the highest absenteeism numbers in the country, likely as a result
provide the financial backstop to support students who are missing too much
class. In fact, recent reporting from U.S. News & World Report found that some
rich suburban districts receive more federal aid for low-income students than
industrial cities, “places like Utica, Schenectady, and Albany in New York, and
Syracuse and Buffalo, all of them have very high rates of chronic absenteeism,
often topping 50 percent, and they all often have very high rates of concentrated
poverty," said Balfanz. "That's part of the challenge, that many states have these
sort of economically and socially isolated cities spread out across the state."
Association seminar in Chicago last fall on poverty and education. UCLA’s Howard
joins other scholars in advocating for more social workers and psychologists on
school campuses to address the factors that may drive chronic absenteeism. An
NPR story recently spotlighted a principal in St. Louis who acquired several free
washers and dryers after learning some students avoided school because they
district joined forces with the city’s after-school program, called Nashville After
Zone Alliance (NAZA), to share student demographic data and results on interim
tests. The program identifies students who are struggling academically and pairs
them with tutors to receive additional learning. School and city leaders in Grand
that has resulted in the absenteeism rate dropping by a quarter and student test
involvement, and even early pregnancy. A student’s truancy can signal low
attachment to school and produce negative relationships with peers who also
associated with those also experiencing drug abuse. The effect of student
truancy not only affects the student, but also continues to impact schools and
communities. Truancy has the potential to cause a decline in the economy of our
nation and therefore be viewed as the serious problem it is. In order to prevent
or reduce high school dropout rates, elementary and middle schools must look at
(15 million) of school-aged children (aged 5–17 years) in the United States did
not have perfect attendance during the previous surveyed year due to illness or
injury. During the survey year, five percent of children missed 11 or more days
of school due to illness or injury. Children from families with low incomes were
more than twice as likely to have absences of 11 days or more (9%) compared
to children from families with the highest income (4%). Children from single-
parent families were more than twice as likely to have been absent from school
for 11 or more days during the past survey year due to illness or injury as
mandate gave birth to free education from primary to secondary under Universal
Primary Education (UPE) and Universal Secondary Education (USE) since 1997
and 2007 respectively. The purpose of this study was to investigate the major
descriptive cross sectional research design. The study also employed both
reports and literature related to students’ absenteeism whist primary data was
collected using questionnaires and interviews. The collected data was analyzed
using descriptive statistics from the study population of one thousand (1000)
of 36 USE schools in the four (4) districts of Serere, Ngora, Soroti and Kumi
comprised of 07, 04, 03, and 03 USE schools respectively. The four districts were
the social environments of 19 high school classes and student absenteeism rates
and the average final grades given by the teacher. 19 classes of high school
students were administered the Classroom Environment Scale. Results show that
classes with high absenteeism rates were seen as high in competition and
teacher control and low in teacher support. Classes in which teachers gave
higher average grades were seen as high in involvement and low in teacher
control. Results are discussed in light of their implications for understanding the
across the country. Surprisingly little research focuses on what schools can do to
increase and sustain students' daily attendance, and even fewer studies explore
activities.
According to School Social Work Journal . Spring2008, Vol. 32
placed on school social workers. In fact, many federal, state, and school officials
are demanding the use of evaluative outcome research that demonstrates the
potential impact of supportive services. The present study examined the impact
of school social work services on reducing risk factors related to truancy as well
social work services were matched with seventy-one comparable students not
receiving services. Overall, results indicate that school social work services had a
behaviors among students who received the intervention. On the other hand, no
settings.