Weaving Success for Students White Paper

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Knitting Effective Strategies for Attendance Success

Emulating the craftsmanship of a skilled weaver who intertwines threads to create a rich and vibrant tapestry, the attendance team can interweave six strategies to bolster their effectiveness and, in turn, foster each student’s connection with education.

Establish a Strong Foundation for Collaboration

The attendance team begins by establishing a strong foundation for collaboration. The team fosters a shared understanding of roles, responsibilities, and terminology, ensuring everyone is on the same page. This includes defining clear communication protocols, establishing resource-sharing practices, and implementing accountability measures for follow-through on action items (Attendance Works, 2018).

Formulate a Driving Purpose

Vision: The team’s vision statement outlines long-term aspirations. For instance, Attendance Works’ vision is that students of all backgrounds and circumstances attend school regularly, engage in learning, and thrive.Mission: The mission statement reflects the team’s daily commitments, encapsulating their core functions. These include coordinating the school’s attendance efforts, assessing student needs, prioritizing interventions based on the identified needs of students, and evaluating progress (Attendance Works, 2018).Attendance Improvement Plan: The attendance plan details the team’s goals, strategy, activities, and estimated timelines. Goals relate to attendance improvement for the entire school, as well as for student subgroups. Key components of the strategy are the school’s use of the pyramid framework (see below), data-driven problem-solving, and progress monitoring. To support this foundational work, team members immerse themselves in the latest policies, protocols, and best practices for promoting attendance and reducing absence. They draw insights from local and national authorities, as well as rich resources like Kearney (2016), Attendance Works, and the International Network for School Attendance.

Enhance Attendance Practices through Self-Assessment

The team also conducts a self-assessment to identify strengths in current attendance efforts and develop consensus on areas for improvement (Attendance Works, 2021). Areas of assessment include the team’s proactive outreach to families, attention to barriers and inequities, and the alignment of interventions with the reasons for absence. You can find self-assessment tools by clicking hereLike the skilled weaver who regularly inspects and adjusts their work, the attendance team ideally conducts regular self-assessments. This process ensures that the tapestry of attendance strategies is always adapting and evolving, reflecting the changing needs of students and the school community.

Leverage the Pyramid Framework

The pyramid framework, also known as the multidimensional, multi-tiered system of supports model (Kearney & Graczyk, 2020), builds upon the response-to-intervention model (Kearney & Graczyk, 2014; Richardson, 2013). While the response-to-intervention model represents attendance supports and interventions as a two-dimensional triangle, the pyramid framework expands this to a three-dimensional structure (discussed further below). However, they share a common feature: the organization of attendance supports and interventions into three levels. Level 1 comprises efforts to promote attendance and prevent absence, typically referred to as ‘supports’. Efforts to reduce absence at Level 2 and Level 3 are typically referred to as ‘interventions’. Regardless of the terminology used, the attendance team’s intention is to foster a positive relationship with education for every student.

Level 1 – Schoolwide Attendance Promotion and Absence Prevention

At this foundational level, the focus is on fostering a culture of attendance and proactively preventing absences, for all students. This includes implementing high-quality instruction and an engaging curriculum; schoolwide attendance policies; creating a safe school environment; fostering awareness among school staff, families, and students about the benefits of regular attendance and the impact of absences; and ; acknowledging good attendance and improved attendance; informing school staff about how they can support the work of the attendance team; and informing families about access to resources that reduce barriers to attendance. 

Level 2 – Early Support in Response to Non-Chronic Attendance Concerns

For students exhibiting early signs of attendance issues, mild absence patterns, or other risk factors for chronic absence, Level 2 interventions provide prompt tailored support to address emerging concerns before they escalate. This may involve mentoring, individualized interventions such as anxiety management, and targeted communication with families, along with close monitoring of attendance patterns.

Level 3 – Intensive Support in Response to Chronic Absence Concerns

Students experiencing chronic absence (persisting over time) or severe absence (high proportion of absence relative to attendance) require more intensive support to address the underlying causes of their absences. Level 3 interventions may involve comprehensive assessment, individualized case management, and collaboration with community partners to address non-school factors contributing to absence.

Establishing Attendance Criteria for Each Level

There are currently no universally accepted benchmarks for determining the proportion of attendance/absence associated with each level of the pyramid (Kearney & Graczyk, 2020). However, the following recommendations by Dubay and Holla (2016) serve as a guide for the school attendance team’s decision-making. In general, Level 1, considered “satisfactory” attendance, encompasses students with 95% or more attendance, translating to no more than 5% absences. Level 2, deemed “at risk” for chronic absence, includes students with attendance ranging between 90-94%, indicating absences of more than 5% and up to 10%. Finally, Level 3, categorized as “chronic absence,” comprises students with attendance below 90%, representing more than 10% absences. Notably, these recommended attendance/absence rates consider all absences, regardless of whether absences have been classified as authorized or unauthorized.

Setting Targets for Each Level

The distribution of students among the three levels plays a crucial role in determining how effective an attendance team’s efforts have been. As a general guideline, presented by Kearney and Graczyk (2022), Level 1 should encompass the majority of students, ideally around 80-85% of the school population. This suggests that most students should be able to maintain satisfactory attendance with schoolwide supports. However, some students, around 10-15%, may require extra support at Level 2, while the most severely affected group, representing 1-5% of the student body, may necessitate more intensive support at Level 3.In practice, the actual distribution of students among the three levels may deviate from this guideline. When a school embarks on improving attendance, the proportion of students in Levels 2 and 3 may initially be higher, potentially putting Level 1 below the recommended 80-85% target, at around 65-75% of students (Kearney & Graczyk, 2014). This emphasizes the importance of establishing realistic targets for each level when an attendance team is beginning its work. This is particularly critical for schools in districts with high absenteeism rates (Kearney & Graczyk, 2022).

Unlocking the 3D Attendance Pyramid

The shift from a two-dimensional triangle to a three-dimensional pyramid captures the multidimensional nature of attendance challenges, underscoring the importance of tailoring interventions to the specific needs of different student groups. Picture a five-sided pyramid, where each face represents a different type of attendance problem: school refusal, truancy, school withdrawal, school exclusion, and illness-related absence. The attendance team can plan interventions tailored to the specific side of the pyramid it is focusing its efforts on. For instance, for school refusal, Level 1 interventions include educating school personnel about signs and risks (Ingul et al., 2019) and Level 2 interventions may involve individualized counseling with a focus on anxiety management, and home visits to identify underlying emotional or social factors contributing to the student’s absence (Maynard et al., 2018). In contrast, when addressing truancy, Level 2 interventions may focus on student mentoring for academic support and engagement.

By adopting the pyramid framework, the school attendance team does not need to abandon existing attendance initiatives. Rather, the framework serves as a scaffolding for the team to conceptualize, refine, and extend upon current efforts. Like other multi-tiered frameworks employed in schools, the pyramid framework for attendance promotes a proactive, data-driven problem-solving approach to identifying, implementing, and evaluating evidence-based interventions that address student needs (Kearney & Graczyk, 2020). These frameworks offer valuable guidance for professionals in schools who are responsible for identifying students in need of extra support and responsible for selecting effective interventions to meet these needs (Harrison, 2023). They also assist schools in optimizing their resource allocation (Goodman & Bohanon, 2018). As a case in point related to students’ academic skills, studies have demonstrated that a robust emphasis on Level 1 supports, the foundational layer of multi-tiered systems, not only proves effective in reducing the need for time-consuming Level 2 and Level 3 interventions (Stoiber & Gettinger, 2016) but also underscores the pivotal role of these frameworks in fostering student success.

Maximize the Impact of Team Meetings

To enhance the impact of their efforts, the attendance team can implement these practical guidelines for effective meetings.

Meeting Frequency

The team’s commitment to meeting regularly fosters ongoing communication, collaboration, and evaluation. But what exactly does ‘regularly’ mean? Attendance Works (2018) recommends weekly meetings when chronic absence surpasses 5% of students. Otherwise, meeting once every two weeks can serve as the standard (Kearney & Graczyk, 2014), but then with weekly meetings at the start of each school term to clarify goals and align strategies (Kearney, 2016).

The designated facilitator:
Maybe the Core Four administrator or a skilled facilitator they appoint.
Guides the meetings.
Serves as the “champion coordinator” of the team’s efforts, demonstrating empathy for
students and organizational competence (Reid, 2003).

Responsibilities During Meetings

Clearly defined responsibilities are essential for efficient and effective team meetings. The responsibilities are shaped – but not limited – by the role that each member has within the Core Four or beyond (see Part 3).

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Trusted by Thousands of Schools Across the Nation