Twitter Facebook Linkedin Phone Envelope
Request Demo
RaaWee K12 Attendance+ logo
× RaaWee Attendance + Best Practices Professional Services Case Studies Testimonials Partner List White Papers News & Blogs Every Day Matters Summit MiLogs Contact
Facebook Linkedin Envelope
Request Demo
× RaaWee Attendance + Best Practices Professional Services Case Studies Testimonials Partner List White Papers News & Blogs Every Day Matters Summit MiLogs Contact

Tag: Truancy

View Presentation
View Slides

Improving Overall Student Attendance

Angela Daniels from Garland Independent School District (ISD) in Garland, TX, recently shared valuable strategies her team employed for student attendance improvement and dropout recovery, showcasing remarkable success in increasing high school attendance from 90.59% in 2023 to 93.2% in 2024. With a student population of 51,000 spread across 70 campuses, Garland ISD faces significant challenges in terms of truancy, which affects approximately 14% of students, and chronic absenteeism, impacting around 9%. Given that 72% of students are economically disadvantaged and 50% classified as at-risk, addressing attendance issues is paramount for the success and well-being of students in the district.

To support their attendance intervention efforts, Garland ISD utilizes the RaaWee K12 Attendance+ system, which provides essential tools and reporting capabilities. This system aids the district in tracking attendance interventions, showcasing proof points, and analyzing trends related to student instructional minutes and funding recovery efforts. By leveraging data effectively, the district can pinpoint areas needing improvement and measure the impact of their strategies.

Addressing Dropout Recovery

Focusing specifically on high school students, particularly ninth graders, the district implemented root cause analysis and flexible scheduling to identify key problem areas affecting attendance. Attendance specialists were designated at each campus, and data was meticulously analyzed by grade level, race, gender, and teacher impact. Recognizing that transition years, such as moving from eighth to ninth grade, often present challenges, the district prioritized these students through home visits and summer outreach initiatives.

One notable initiative is the RISE program, which allows students to customize their schedules to accommodate personal and family challenges. This program encourages collaboration with counseling, special programs, and other stakeholders to establish fair and equitable criteria for participation. Impressively, 85% of participants in the RISE program continued their education or graduated, highlighting the program’s effectiveness.

Angela emphasized the importance of data analysis, collaboration, and celebrating small wins throughout the process. She also stressed the necessity of structured plans, ongoing checkpoints, and stakeholder involvement that extends beyond just the attendance team. By creating equitable solutions and fostering engagement and positive attendance, Garland ISD is dedicated to supporting students in staying present, connected, and thriving in their educational journeys. Their comprehensive approach serves as a model for other districts striving to improve student attendance and overall success.

Angela Daniels, Garland ISD, TX
Email Angela Daniels

About the Presenter

Angela Daniels, M.Ed., Student Engagement Administrator, Student Services, Garland ISD, TX

Angela is a former Intervention Coordinator and teacher with 20 years of experience developing unique opportunities to help all students succeed. She has led initiatives that have reduced dropout rates and enhanced student engagement. She holds certifications in Education Leadership and Dropout Prevention.

Posted in BlogsTagged Attendance-Improvement, Chronic-Absenteeism, Dropout, Dropout-Recovery, Garland-ISD, RaaWee-K12, RaaWeeK12, School, Student-Attendance, Students, TruancyLeave a Comment on Bringing Students Back: Helping Students Return to School
View Video
View Slides

The Collective Approach to Chronic Absenteeism

Widespread Problem in Schools

Chronic absenteeism is rising in schools nationwide as the latest national data reveals that approx. 70% of schools are experiencing increased student absences. Student absenteeism has a ripple effect on the school, family, and community. This urgent crisis demands immediate, effective action from all school community stakeholders.

Addressing Truancy Through Collaboration

To tackle the rise in chronic absenteeism, school leaders and educators must focus on working together through multi-tiered interventions. Solving truancy needs a united effort from schools, families, and community members to create effective solutions. Understanding why students miss school and finding ways to re-engage them involves teachers, counselors, and community support.

Tiered Support for Improvement

Members of “the collective” need effective support at three levels: preventative (Tier 1), targeted (Tier 2), and individualized (Tier 3). Universal strategies should help all students, and training sessions can help staff spot early signs of disengagement. Information on truancy and attendance rules should be shared with parents during registration, and classes in different languages should be offered throughout the year. Students should also learn about good attendance habits during the first week of school.

The Importance of School Attendance

Daily school attendance is key to student success, affecting academic performance and behavior. Absenteeism impacts schools, families, and communities. Districts must create systems that bring together staff, families, and partners to address attendance challenges. Dan Heath’s book “Upstream” discusses strategies to gather the right people to solve root problems, inspiring leaders to work together on improving attendance.

Building Partnerships for Attendance Improvement

Strong partnerships between schools, families, and communities are essential for overcoming attendance barriers. Join my online webinar, “Where Are Our Students?” at Chronic Absenteeism Online Training | ED311 Events for strategies aimed at administrators, teachers, school nurses, counselors, businesses, and community organizations.

Resources

Quick Reference Attendance Guide: www.nprinc.com/chronic-absenteeism/ RestorativeFlo Consulting Website: www.restorativefloeducationalsolutions.com
LinkedIn: Sharon Bradley, M.Ed. | LinkedIn

Sharon Bradley, M.Ed. Principal Consultant of RestorativeFlo Educational Solutions, LLC.

About the Author

Sharon Bradley is the Principal Consultant of RestorativeFlo Educational Solutions, LLC and also serves as a school district administrator where she has helped shape the district’s approach to social and emotional development and truancy prevention for all students. Throughout her 22 years in education, she has served as director, alternative high school principal, assistant principal, dropout prevention program coordinator, special education teacher, and behavior specialist. In her current role, she supports programs such as: Attendance, Social Emotional Learning, Restorative Practices, and Parent Education and Engagement. Sharon Bradley has recently been recognized by Education-First “SEL in Action” and D CEO Magazine for her innovative efforts of leveraging SEL to help decrease chronic absenteeism. Sharon is the author of the reference guide “Chronic Absenteeism: Prevention and Intervention Strategies for Schools, Families and Communities”. She is a graduate of Mississippi State University where she earned her bachelor’s degree in Special Education; and her master’s degree in Educational Administration from Prairie View A & M University.

Posted in BlogsTagged Attendance, Attendance Improvement, Chronic Absenteeism, Intervention, MTSS, Student Attendance, TruancyLeave a Comment on “The Collective” Tiered Actionable Strategies to Address Chronic Absenteeism
View Presentation Video

Description

We are dedicated to helping educators get their students back to school. The purpose of this information is to point out some roadblocks that impede progress; to help schools reduce chronic absenteeism and get their school-avoidant kids back to learning. We will propose solutions that you can employ to remove these barriers and improve successful school returns.

Problem: School Avoidance Disrupts Families and Challenges Schools.


School avoidance wreaks havoc on families.
The following are some examples of how families in our school avoidance alliance community describe it:

  • Pernicious, Isolating, Overwhelming, Draining, Gut wrenching, Hopeless, Stressful, and Torturous.

School avoidance also profoundly impacts educators who want to help these kids. These are some ways educators describe it:

  • Frustrating, Confounding, Helpless, Discouraging, Time-Consuming, Lack of Interventions, Feeling like a failure, and Tiring.

There has been an underwhelming amount of guidance on this issue, so schools and educators must seek solutions independently.

The good news is that you and your colleagues have the power to improve student outcomes. 

  • Schools have to commit to addressing this problem. 

  • Misinformation and misconceptions will hamper your efforts to engage effectively with students and their families.

  • School staff must be thoroughly educated to start tackling this problem. Once the team is educated, they will feel empowered to utilize appropriate interventions, strategies, and engagement.

Problem: Truancy and School Avoidance are Different.


School avoidance is motivated by severe emotional distress; the parents know the child is not attending and usually are trying to help their kids back.
On the other hand, truancy is usually motivated by pleasure and not anxiety-based, it is concealed from the parents, and kids seek to increase positive emotions.

  • Labeling school-avoidant kids as truants causes inappropriate and often damaging responses.

  • Kids with school avoidance are not deliberately ditching school. Internal feelings of distress, discomfort and fear cause their avoidant behavior. 

  • An excellent first step would be to adjust how you define truancy and label kids with school avoidance as truant.
     

Another huge issue that should be evaluated is punitive responses. And responses that feel punitive to families and their students. Family feedback on this issue reveals the following school responses make families think the school is unfeeling, unkind, and punishing.

  • Curt and cold attendance letters with threats of fines, truancy charges, and court appearances.

  • Sending police officers to the home

  • Failing students without considering their school avoidance is caused by mental health challenges or learning differences.

  • Utilizing grade retention.

  • Calling in child protective services with no evidence of parental neglec


The school attendance, mental health, and SEL community have promoted restorative practices over punitive ones for several years. Unfortunately, this guidance needs to trickle down to individual schools faster. These responses often create acrimony between school and home, countering best practices for getting kids back to school.

Problem: Early Interventions Take Work to Achieve.

Early interventions are among the most critical drivers for reducing school avoidance and getting students back quicker. Performing early action is dependent on the following factors:

  • Educating families on school avoidance, since most parents are unaware of it, they often miss early signs and are unsure how to help the situation.

  • Families don’t realize their school has a team of mental health professionals available to help them.

  • Provide your staff with school avoidance professional development to recognize signs, signals, and triggers. Being educated on this unique challenge will show them how to respond and strategically approach each school-avoidant student according to their individual needs. 

  • Another essential suggestion to help improve early interventions is to include your school counselors, attendance staff, school nurses, and truancy folks when you provide school avoidance professional development. These professionals are on the front lines and have access to these students first. They can intervene in the early stages before absenteeism becomes chronic.

Closing

The problem of school avoidance will continue to grow if schools don’t reevaluate their responses and interventions. You may not realize it, but you are an agent of change. It takes one person to start the process. Educators like you deserve that feeling of self-satisfaction and gratitude when you contribute to helping a child back to school and improve their life trajectory. 

Jayne Demsky, School Avoidance Alliance
Jayn Demsky, Founder of the School Avoidance Alliance

About the Author

For the past decade, Jayne has been helping families get kids with school avoidance back to school. In 2014, she started the School Avoidance Alliance to educate families and schools on school avoidance best practices and evidence -based solutions. In additional to the School Avoidance Alliance website, Jayne developed one-of-a-kind educational resources for both parents and educators. Some of their resources are, The School Avoidance Parent’s Ultimate Guide to Working with Your School, The School Avoidance Master Class for Parents: A Tier 2 and Tier 3 Intervention for chronic absenteeism, a course schools purchase for parents, and an Educator training course called, Everything You Need to Know to Get Your Students Back to School.

Jayne serves on the International Network for School Attendance (INSA) conference committee and was recently honored as a featured speaker at INSA’s Making Waves in School Attendance Annual Conference in the Netherlands in October 2022. She’s also been featured in Education Week, The Washington Post, CBS News, Yahool Life and USA Today.

Posted in BlogsTagged Absenteeism, Attendance, Attendance-Improvement, Chronic-Absenteeism, Preventing-Absenteeism, School-Avoidance, Students, TruancyLeave a Comment on School Avoidance Success Factors – Why You Need to Know Right Now!

from EDMS Expert Series: 02/17/2023

View Presentation Video

Interventions for Chronic Absenteeism

You cannot punish me if I am not there. Absent students have been screaming this at schools forever. It is a scapegoat complex. Schools believe adding more punishments or rewards will change behavior. It’s true, but only if the student shows up. Students with prolonged absences, for any number of reasons, become separated from the people and the process. No amount of incentives, positive or negative, will get them back. Wholistic targeted interventions, emphasizing people and services, aimed at re-establishing bonds at tier 3 is what is required. This session engages the participants in reviewing a common few interventions, some emerging ones, and top three tips on how to develop your own. In sum, prolonged absence, and avoidance, is more about the school and the people than the academics.

Beware the Likes

With every social media post comes the “likes” and “shares.” Whether we had a great dinner, passed a test, or just went somewhere new, our experiences are being rated. Of late, the rating has moved beyond the experience to a reflection of how much the person and their experiences are liked or un-liked.

The video RATED asked how many stars would you give yourself, if you were truly being honest about your actions, behaviors, and thoughts around others. Then imagine, based on that rating, you walked around with everyone knowing whether you were a 5 or a 1-star person. Even further, imagine your star now influencing your experiences; where ate, services you received, who talked to you, and how others perceived you?

The audience was asked to give their reactions on how they felt after watching the video trailer. Evident below some said it would feel good. Presumably, those were the ones with 4 or 5 stars who would want others to see that they have been good, kind, and trustworthy. On the contrary, many noted they feel bad, ashamed, pressured, embarrassed, frustrated, worried, and even nervous.

Embracing Multi-Tiered System of Supports (MTSS)

The exercise gives us a glimpse into the thinking of students who have higher degree of absenteeism. Though we have embraced evidence-based practices like the Multi-Tiered System of Supports (MTSS) grounded in public health and framed as an organizing model for response and interventions, the model rates students. Upon reflection, it is a structure, which inadvertently labels students and limits service access based on that label. Thus, when trying to encourage students with prolonged absences to return and engage, they too feel bad, nervous, pressured, frustrated, ashamed, worried, judged, and so on. They feel their good may have been overlooked. The one or two wrong was judged incorrectly and there is no recovery.

Viewing Intervention through a New Lens

The topic my absence, your problem speaks to our response to interventions. We must be able to view interventions through a difference lens. For instance, simply adopting practice that became ‘best practices’ under curated circumstances to our own acculturated student body and resource-gaps is flawed. We must choose interventions to our situated context, leverage the data we have in defining DIY solutions, explore emerging practices in our own schools, and feel free to learn from others to curate our own circumstances. This is imperative because the students are finding themselves in tier 3 of the MTSS model are often less than 5% of our student bodies and require not wholesale interventions but as much specialized attention as possible.

 We cannot go any further without defining absenteeism. My definition of absenteeism is

“Absenteeism is the total sum of a student’s in-school and out-of-school experiences”

Each experience fuels the pull and push factor of the student’s engagement in school.

  • In-school experiences are everything in and about the school environment, everyone in the school environment and all decisions having to do with the school. The converse is also true,
  • Out-of-school experiences involves everything NOT in or about the school environment, persons in it, and decisions having to do with school.

Therefore, if absenteeism is a problem about experiences, then interventions must be about solving problems. The interventions must solve problems by those who have decision-making power for those who will be impacted through any means (activity, behavior, technology) to disrupt a chain or create an outcome.

My absence means my experiences have created a problem for which YOU must find a solution because it has created a problem for you in keeping me engaged in education. Prolonged absence and school avoidance is more about the school and people in it than the academics. The child still wants to learn and fit in but the dynamics in the school or getting to and staying in the school have affected this desire.

Schools are exceptional in defining and implementing interventions to create outcomes. However, there has never been a true formula simply to enable good or better outcomes for students versus old models of increased punishment. I offer one formula to aid in decision making. Assume A squared is defined as excessive absenteeism and our discussion on experiences and interventions. Then the formula would read A2 E + I.

Adjusting the Narrative of Control

The assumption being that anytime we have high rates of excessive absenteeism we would first aim to modify the student experiences in and out of school through interventions that are dialed up or down based on the severity and intensity of the push and pull factors impacting the student. In doing so we are clear that we know no number of in-school incentives will work with the student is absent and that holistic and targeted interventions are the best for the students where emphasize attention to people and services out-of-school to reengage through support, build school bonds, and better relationships. In the end control matters. Students who have moved from direct control to internal control do not respond to rewards and punishment nor pro-social relationships but to their own personal compass. As such, to reclaim them we must do the reverse. We must first appeal to their personal compass, what is important to them through out-of-school supports. Move into building pro-social relationships, which eventually moves them under a surveillance of influence where rewards and punishment can make an impact on decision-making.

Positive outcomes however depend on partnerships. Consider cross-system streaming to share and connect to out-of-school interventions and supports. When doing the intervention via:

DIY – Do. It. Yourself Method:

Be sure to leverage the current data you have and use the formula presented herein. Be sure to Devise, Define, Determine, and Deploy

CURRENT EXAMPLES:

When using a method already in place it is important to ensure that there is a direct match between the defined problem and Solution like the examples below.

EMERGING PRACTICES:

There are many organizations responding to how to effectively meet students where they are. One area is in socio-emotional learning. Some have used training of staff and personnel (like GCSORED)while others have used technology, AI, and other software like (Fight for Life Foundation). The goal is the same identify the problem and match with solution to enable measurement.

Relationships vs Punishment

Sadly, most interventions have been negative and punitive. We have data to show interventions like PBIS, MTSS, Science of Reading, Extra Curricular, etc. can change behavior but many times, we cannot define if the problem for which it was instituted has been solved. We must use the right type of interventions at the right time to make the best impact. Build relationships!

Dr. Carolyn Gentle-Gennity, PhD, Butler University
Carolyn Gentle-Genitty, PhD | Indiana University School of Social Work | cgentleg@iu.edu

About the Author

Dr. Carolyn Gentle-Genitty, founder, lead consultant, and Chief Education Officer for Pivot Attendance Solutions, has inspired many administrators, educators, students, and school social workers as a past chair of the school’s concentration Masters Curriculum, tenured professor, and Director of the Bachelors for Social Work Program. Having worked closely with Indiana Department of Education to assist school counselors in acquiring a school counselor license and coordinating curriculum mapping and application, she knows the intricacies of working with school-community partnerships. She has been a forerunner in responding to school absenteeism, truancy, and social bonding. She has over 30 years in youth development, 20 years in dropout and truancy and more specifically she brings over 12 years studying, researching, presenting, and writing about absenteeism locally, nationally, and internationally. In the US she is a leader in absenteeism and understanding school attendance problems and translating such into practice models for implementation. She is forging partnerships in colleges to establish the area as a formal field of study.

Posted in BlogsTagged Absenteeism, Attendance, Attendance-Improvement, Chronic-Absenteeism, MTSS, School, Student, Student-Attendance, TruancyLeave a Comment on My Absence—Your Problem | Interventions for Students with Higher Degree of Absenteeism

Federal & State Funding Opportunities

Understanding the world of education finance can be daunting for even the most seasoned of school and district leaders. The good news is, you don’t need to be a financial wizard to make fiscal decisions that will last a lifetime for your students by investing in attendance tracking and improvement technology. Implementing a robust digital platform that includes proactive and reactive strategies, multi-tiered interventions, high quality real time data, and two-way communications has proven to be the most effective approach to truancy abatement.

While chronic absenteeism preceded the pandemic and ballooned during, it has not quite bounced back in the aftermath (if we can even say we have fully reached post-pandemic status). According to the National Center for Education Statistics (July 6, 2022) “Compared to a typical school year prior to the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, 72 percent of U.S. public schools reported an increase in chronic absenteeism among their students. So, what’s happening? That’s what we’d all like to know. 

Attendance Tracking

Discovering the root causes of absenteeism, school refusal, chronic truancy, avoidance, or whatever other terms exist to describe the post-pandemic epidemic of student non-attendance is essential before allocating funding to address the issues. Since we know that there is no single or predominant reason, but rather an intricate mix of ingredients that contribute to truancy behaviors, addressing the problem systemically requires multi-pronged approaches. If we can reframe non-attendance as a symptom rather than “the problem” we can get closer to addressing the core of why many students have not returned post-pandemic. And only then does the conversation about resource allocation follow. 

Most schools and districts have not seen these incredible amounts of education funding coming through to mitigate the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic in decades, if ever. Even so, dollars remain limited and often time-bound, so it’s important to leverage short-term activities with an eye on long-term solutions for attendance improvements. Distinguishing between limited-term revenue and ongoing funding can help leaders determine appropriate and sustainable allocations. 

Simply put, one-time dollars, otherwise known as “soft money” should only be spent on actions or items that are expected to fulfill short-term purposes. Ongoing dollars can be relied on for longer term applications. Covid relief funds, for example, such as the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act, American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act, and Governor’s Emergency Relief Programs (GEER), all have a shorter shelf life than the annually distributed Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) Title I-IV funds. 

When adopting an attendance monitoring program, consider braiding different funding streams to cover your initial costs with limited-term funding, such as professional development and training, hardware purchases, technology infrastructure or upgrades, attendance incentive campaigns, or technical support. After you get up and running, ongoing funding can be used to pay for annual licensing/contracts for attendance and student information systems, support staffing, interventions, and communications. 

In my experience, most school and district leaders, outside of business services departments, confess that managing budgets is their least favorite part of the job—and one they weren’t often explicitly trained for. 

Try inverting your thinking from the traditional approach… 

“We have a grant allocation of $500,000 that lasts for three years; what can we buy?” 

…To a different mindset: “We have two major attendance issues to address—one for long-term truants and one for students who were previously attending but stopped after the pandemic.” Then ask these questions: 

  • What tools do we need to monitor and communicate attendance issues effectively?
  • Which funding sources can we tap that will address each major problem?
  • What kinds of support are necessary to move the needle for each group? 

Once you’ve asked and answered those questions, then the dollars will follow. And your inquiry before investment will pay off in the best ways for the students you serve.

Dr. Kim Wallace, EdD, Process Makes Perfect
Email Dr. Kim Wallace

About the Author

Kim Wallace, Professional Educational Consultant & Author at Process Makes Perfect

Born and raised in an educator household, Dr. Kim Wallace started her own career in public education 30 years ago as a high school English and history teacher before becoming a site principal and district office administrator. Her most recent K-12 role was as superintendent of one of the 20 largest school districts in California. 

Kim joined the UC Berkeley School of Education Leadership Programs division as the Associate Director of the 21st Century California School Leadership Academy (21CSLA) State Center in 2020. She also runs her own consulting company Process Makes Perfect, specializing in real world solutions for practitioners in the field. Kim consults, writes, and presents internationally on systems change and emerging trends in educational leadership. An award-winning, innovative educator, Kim leverages her abilities in educational administration, program management, and relationship development to optimize institutional effectiveness and deliver remarkable results.

Dr. Wallace’s book Leading the Launch: A Ten-Stage Process for Successful School District Initiatives was published by Solution Tree Press in 2021, followed by Leading Through an Equity Lens in 2023. Her upcoming book, Gamechanging Leadership in Action: An Educator’s Companion is in production with Routledge/Taylor & Francis (Fall 2025). Kim attended the University of California Santa Barbara for her undergraduate degree in history. She then earned her Master’s in Education (M.Ed.) at the University of California Los Angeles and culminated her educational goals with a Doctorate in Education (Ed.D.) from the University of California Davis.

Posted in BlogsTagged Absenteeism, Attendance, Attendance-Improvement, Attendance-Intervention, Attendance-Tracking, Chronic-Absenteeism, Funding, Intervention, MTSS, RaaWee-K12, RaaWeeK12, School, Students, TruancyLeave a Comment on Finding Federal & State Level Funding for Implementing Attendance Tracking & Improvement Technology

Abstract

Data is only as effective as the use it is put to. Often, data collected in K-12 schools is siphoned from data lakes and warehouses to meet state and federal compliance requirements, rather than being collected with the intent to act upon it. As a result, schools have accumulated large datasets, but they still struggle to report on impactful progress for early student intervention.

Download Slides

With local control, schools have the opportunity to decide the story they wish to tell with their data. While meeting compliance requirements, there can be a duality in data collection, where the data is not always collected to be acted upon.

To address this challenge, the session used a workshop format to guide participants through answering 10 questions, the most crucial being, “What story do you want your data to tell?” Researchers often use these types of questions to determine data collection protocols and define hypotheses.

Ultimately, data must offer a TIP (Train, Interpret, Problem-solve) to its users. Data must help solve problems. If we cannot Train it, Interpret it, or use it to solve Problems, it is essentially useless.

Introduction

Yuk! Math! Like math, data is a love-hate relationship, until basic tenets help you to …Train , Interpret, and Problem-solve (TIP). There is ambivalence with data. Though we ravel in what it can do and what it can say, we hesitate to engage for fear of misunderstanding, error, or embarrassment from getting it wrong. Instead, we hire it out, pass it along, and leave collection and monitoring to someone else for someone else. The fact is when data is collected to meet an external purpose, retrofitting it to aid in intervention may be misleading at best. Recycling anything suggest the ‘thing’ is being used for something different than what it was intended. The same is true with data. Simply repurposing won’t get you the right answers to influence the change or progress you need to make. Therefore, we must know what is expected, what story we want to tell, and what impact or outcomes we want to see. 

Engagement is required. And the below Worksheet will assist you in engaging your entire team in the process and the IDEAL model. Click here or below to download the Worksheet.

Basic Research

The IDEAL model (Identify, Define, Explore, Action, Look back) is a popular and simplistic approach used to engage with basic research tenets. The idea is that data collected must have a purpose and work to solve a problem. To ensure it does exactly that, it is essential to establish criteria for inclusion or exclusion and explore how best to collect and analyze the information for action. Once done, it is important to reflect on your progress to determine if more data is needed to tell a complete story or if variables must be removed. Remember, looking back is a must. Storytelling with data is only as accurate as the current data you have at that time. When new data is collected or presented, go back and revisit the process.

IDEAL - Research

☐            Identify – Find and Name Problem

☐            Define – Set Criteria (inclusion and exclusion)

☐            Explore – Collect and conduct analysis

☐            Action – Do something with it. How will you address the problem?

☐            Look Back – Monitor the change; verify if there are new variables

The IDEAL steps are a part of the scientific method. The method historically requires you observe something in a systematic way, then ask a question, form an opinion about it, make a prediction, conduct an experiment, and modify your prediction based on results.

Defining Your Attendance Improvement Story Components through 10 Quesions

Like artificial intelligence and machine learning, the goal is to define, train, interpret, expose, and use existing data to tell a story. Supervised learning and unsupervised learning are required. This means the criteria established will dictate what must be collected (supervised) but as you attempt to solve the problem, trends, and patterns will emerge (unsupervised) which together will tell your story. Below are 10 questions to address varied components of the Attendance Improvement story you want to tell and a rationale context for each question.

10 Questions in Addressing Chronic Absenteeism

SO WHAT? NOW WHAT?

☐            What or who else is needed?

☐            Which documents inform my data?

☐            Which data brings dollars?

Data Question Context

Why do I need data? OR What will I do with data?

Determining the why and what of data are essential components of storytelling. They establish a baseline to assess change; set the performance goals which enable measurement of success; aids in organizing the information to be collected and combine to tell a convincing story through examination of trends and patterns.

What story must data tell?

Assessing good or bad depends on the story we tell. The same is true for determining urgency or a call to action. Data is often used as a call to action. As a result, it must be strategic and relevant, include examples for audience to visualize the why, be intentional with visuals to distill data, and be communicate with the action needed. In sum, data visualization with compelling narratives help to comprehend data and act.

Who must know about the outcomes of data?

If data must move the audience to action, knowing the audience is as essential as reporting the result to stakeholders. Therefore the outcomes must be communicated to those from whom the data was taken, those who must take action, those who will benefit from the action, as well as those who will monitor the change. Data is only as good as what it communicates and who it impacts.

Where must the data come from or be stored?

The location from which the data comes dictates its accuracy and effectiveness. Though we may retrieve data from student information systems, local state departments, from students and teachers, or even from community, the best place to get and store data is from a system where all variables impacted or will be impacted or may change can be added and assessed. Everything you would want to know must be collected in variable form. This will change overtime therefore the system must be able to accommodate the change.

When do I need data and how often?

Data needs change all the time. Despite data collection occurring in regular cycles such as every month, every semester, or as the states requires; it should be collected as often as available but best assessed semi-annually or annually. This is important because data must be collected around interventions or organized changes. The outcome is the ability to spot patterns and trends so when compared we are aware of where and when to intervene. In addition to create change, we are aware of where old variables must be complemented or swapped out for new ones.

How do I know the data answers my questions?

Data can be used to answer any question. The key is, can it answer your question. As such, playing a role in data collection or siphoning data from one place to use elsewhere requires early attention. Not everyone must be on board with what you collect but you must create a hypothesis with the questions you hope to answer. This is the only way you can be sure the data will answer the questions you have.  Identifying a hypothesis is a way of listing your problems and identifying the solutions you anticipate.

What actions do I plan to take with data?

After collecting and assessing data, action is necessary for it to have meaning. Revisiting the hypothesis can give direction but data users must take action by informing stakeholders, defining  benchmarks, assessing if goals are being met, and planning for change. Most importantly, data evaluators must identify the areas where they would want to introduce intervention or new variables for the best impact from data action. The actions can be targeted and specific to what change you want to see, within the timeframe you have identified within your system.

How do I monitor change from data?

Monitoring change, resulting from data, is simple when we run trend analysis at regular cycles. Monitoring at the start and end of each cycle ensures accuracy and timely variable change. A cycle is defined as a period for collecting information determined by the data collector. Its best to establish your own monitoring plan with all stakeholders who collects, stores, and assesses data. The goal is to use what you collect to set benchmarks, confirm hypotheses, and run trend analysis.

What interventions can facilitate change?

So, you want to use the data to facilitate change? Any intervention can facilitate change; albeit negative or positive but its best to have variable-specific interventions. Intervention success is not dependent on the number of persons impacted or the cost but, on the change anticipated by the hypothesis. In fact, intervention success is dependent on the problem to solve. If there is a match between the problem and the solution, interventions are often effective to facilitate the desired change.

How do I report on and sustain the change?

To complete the cycle, we must share the findings with all stakeholders especially those who identified the problem. Determining what to share is as important as where to share. Sharing on social media, in written or online reports, and annual general meetings are good places to start.

Summary

Data matters! However, without guidance the story it tells can change based on who and what is asked. To use data effectively, it’s important to be clear on what data you need, the story you want to tell, outcomes you want, actions you plan to take, possible interventions, monitoring and reporting plan, and how to sustain change. No matter what, Train your data, find ways to Interpret, and make sure it always solves the problem you need it to solve or identify change. This process is called TIP – Train, Interpret, Problem-solve. In the end, use the EARS process as often as you can to assess success—Elicit, Amplify, Reinforce, and Start over with each change you want to see.

Resources

  • Perception of School Social Bonding  – Instrument and Scoring
  • The International Network for Student Attendance (INSA) offers other questionnaires effective for absenteeism and attendance. Click on the + sign on the far right to get access to translation versions. 
  • Raawee K12 Solutions with whom we partner: https://raaweek12.com.
Carolyn Gentle-Genitty, PhD | Indiana University School of Social Work | cgentleg@iu.edu

About the Author

Dr. Carolyn Gentle-Genitty, founder, lead consultant, and Chief Education Officer for Pivot Attendance Solutions, has inspired many administrators, educators, students, and school social workers as a past chair of the school’s concentration Masters Curriculum, tenured professor, and Director of the Bachelors for Social Work Program. Having worked closely with Indiana Department of Education to assist school counselors in acquiring a school counselor license and coordinating curriculum mapping and application, she knows the intricacies of working with school-community partnerships. She has been a forerunner in responding to school absenteeism, truancy, and social bonding. She has over 30 years in youth development, 20 years in dropout and truancy and more specifically she brings over 12 years studying, researching, presenting, and writing about absenteeism locally, nationally, and internationally. In the US she is a leader in absenteeism and understanding school attendance problems and translating such into practice models for implementation. She is forging partnerships in colleges to establish the area as a formal field of study.

Posted in BlogsTagged Attendance, Attendance-Improvement, Attendance-Reports, Chronic-Absenteeism, Data, School, Students, TruancyLeave a Comment on Data is a Bucket with Holes: 10 Questions to Plug Holes

Attendance Team Collaboration

Teamwork is nothing new to the education field–it is a major part of the way we conduct the important business of educating children. Teachers are involved in grade-level or content area teams. Support and clerical staff work together on teams in the front office. Administrators operate on leadership teams at the district level. And there are teams on everything in between: from school climate committees to parent-teacher organizations to curriculum task forces to governing boards. But just because we’re all on teams doesn’t necessarily mean we automatically know how to interact, function, or execute our jobs or missions as one entity. Think about all of the teams you’ve participated on, either voluntarily or by assignment, and the qualities that made them successful…or not. 

Team Building for Success

Building a high-performing attendance team can be a little more complex than groups that are affiliated by subject matter or job roles, since they tend to be multi-disciplinary, cross-functional, and far-reaching. However, they do passionately share the same goal: Improving attendance for our most marginalized students. Here are a few tips for creating and organizing a well-designed attendance team: 

Think outside of the box when deciding whom to invite.

Obviously, you want to include the director of student services, a nurse or child welfare specialist, a site administrator from each grade span, a counselor, and attendance clerks, but also think about adding a student, parent/caregiver, student information system manager, and external community partners that also serve families. They can each add unique and valuable perspectives and offer creative solutions to consider as you craft your strategies and approaches to reduce truancies and chronic absenteeism.

Relationships don’t build themselves.

Though there are many pressing and urgent issues to attend to in your meetings, the work can be done much more effectively when team members know each other as human beings, learn to trust each other, and share their stories together. Spend some time exploring what draws each member to the work, why they care, what motivates them, and what they hope to accomplish by joining the team. These strong relationships will help people commit to coming to meetings and participating with their whole selves for the long term. 

Know and state your purpose.

In early meetings, the team should establish norms, define appropriate goals and expectations, and establish a flexible decision-making process. It’s also important to communicate with each other openly, freely, and democratically. Consider leveling the playing field and breaking down barriers by using first names rather than titles or ranking. When issues are handled professionally and promptly and each member knows how their own part contributes to the whole, teams can cover more ground and make a greater impact on student attendance. 

As the African proverb says “If you want to go fast, go alone, if you want to go far, go together”. And since we have many miles to go before we sleep in the work of improving student attendance, it’s much more sustainable to do so as a team that works!

Dr. Kim Wallace, EdD, Process Makes Perfect
Email Dr. Kim Wallace

About the Presenter

Kim Wallace, Professional Educational Consultant & Author at Process Makes Perfect

Born and raised in an educator household, Dr. Kim Wallace started her own career in public education 30 years ago as a high school English and history teacher before becoming a site principal and district office administrator. Her most recent K-12 role was as superintendent of one of the 20 largest school districts in California. 

Kim joined the UC Berkeley School of Education Leadership Programs division as the Associate Director of the 21st Century California School Leadership Academy (21CSLA) State Center in 2020. She also runs her own consulting company Process Makes Perfect, specializing in real world solutions for practitioners in the field. Kim consults, writes, and presents internationally on systems change and emerging trends in educational leadership. An award-winning, innovative educator, Kim leverages her abilities in educational administration, program management, and relationship development to optimize institutional effectiveness and deliver remarkable results.

Dr. Wallace’s book Leading the Launch: A Ten-Stage Process for Successful School District Initiatives was published by Solution Tree Press in 2021, followed by Leading Through an Equity Lens in 2023. Her upcoming book, Gamechanging Leadership in Action: An Educator’s Companion is in production with Routledge/Taylor & Francis (Fall 2025). Kim attended the University of California Santa Barbara for her undergraduate degree in history. She then earned her Master’s in Education (M.Ed.) at the University of California Los Angeles and culminated her educational goals with a Doctorate in Education (Ed.D.) from the University of California Davis.

Posted in BlogsTagged Attendance, Attendance-Improvement, Attendance-Team, Chronic-Absenteeism, Collaborative, RaaWee-K12, RaaWeeK12, School, Students, Team-Building, Teambuilding, TruancyLeave a Comment on Building High Performing Teams: A Collaborative Approach to Attendance Improvement

Proactive Strategies

Take a break from the hamster wheel. Plan your year! Assess why you do what you do and the results you are getting. Intentionally defining and planning to prevent absenteeism requires methods and tools, partnerships and data interpretation, and social connections. The result of these factors lends itself to the content necessary to identify needed messaging strategies and influence change for measurable positive attendance improvement outcomes. 

from EDMS Expert Series: 09/22/2022

View Presentation Video

Discussions in Preventing Absenteeism

Discussions of the importance of schooling and student attendance dates far back to 1635, in Boston. It was similar to the Free Grammar School of England. The Boston Latin School for boys was introduced to prepare students for college, although some like Benjamin Franklin dropped out (See here). Since then and now, there have been questions about how to prevent children from leaving or missing school. The study of school absenteeism, now being advanced worldwide by the International Network for School Attendance (INSA) and supported by various national organizations, is documenting scholarly research on forms, types, categories, and methods to examine school attendance and absenteeism. In fact, their earliest citation dates back to the 1980s with the first accessible article by Berney, Kolvin, Bhate, Garside, Jeans, Kay, & Scarth (1981) on school phobia in the British Journal of Psychiatry.

The point is, we have been studying, examining, and trying to figure out how to prevent student absenteeism for centuries. With mountains of data, processes, ways, and means to approach at least one answer we have come to know that methods, tools, and messaging are the hallmark of any effective solution. Such solutions should be consistent and cyclical.

Accomplishing consistency in methods, tools, and messaging speculates, to prevent we must know.

Preventing is knowing! 

We must know what we are preventing and what symptoms have been shown to indicate an interest in being absent or signals of willingness to be present. These can include psychosocial matters, home, academic, curriculum demands, functioning, time-based discipline, lesson absence, classroom climate, and more. Therefore, we should be asking “what matters?”

Absenteeism = All Experience

Knowing absenteeism equals the total sum of a students’ in-school and out-of-school experiences, then what matters is what happens in and out of school.

In and out of school means what matters for students regarding:

  • Attending – Presence and absence from school and curriculum
  • Participating – Engagement in or not in positive and negative school experiences
  • Bonding – Feeling attached, committed, involved, and believing in the value of school
  • Tracking – Who, what, and why track attendance and insights gleaned to improve
  • Sharing – Using information for benefit of students and shared for improvement for all

Knowing what matters in and out school offers us the opportunity to learn also that control matters. There are three forms of Direct control (rewards and punishment), Indirect control (pro-social relationships), and Internal control (personal compass). Finding and implementing tools and interventions to respond to these three (3) forms of control are sure ways to prevent school absenteeism.

Getting to outcomes however, requires us to have methods, tools and messaging.

Methods should assist in measurement of data and use of data lakes to report on all controls. It should …

  1. Identify indicators: Ways to compare last year to this coming year; RaaWee data tools can help
  2. Find Benchmarks: External partners to whom we can compare progress and set targets

Tools should ensure indirect control and should…

  1. Give a temperature check on impact for students, staff, climate, and families. For all.
  2. Whether it is MTSS, RTI, PBIS, RaaWee, your own solution or emerging solutions, measurable impact is the goal.

Messaging should meet students’ internal control needs and share what matters…

  1. Convey the importance of schooling and celebrating presence.
  2. Inform of current state and growth yet to come
  3. Value partnership and relationships and role of all

When preventing is knowing, control matters. What matters is tracking methods, tools, and messaging in data lakes where consistent reports of impact from all controls can be gleaned and shared. The lives of our students and their families are in our hands. They must know why schooling, in various formats, matters and that we care.

###

Dr. Carolyn Gentle-Gennity, PhD, Butler University
Carolyn Gentle-Genitty, PhD Butler University

About the Author

Dr. Carolyn Gentle-Genitty, founder, lead consultant, and Chief Education Officer for Pivot Attendance Solutions, has inspired many administrators, educators, students, and school social workers as a past chair of the school’s concentration Masters Curriculum, tenured professor, and Director of the Bachelors for Social Work Program. Having worked closely with the Indiana Department of Education to assist school counselors in acquiring a school counselor license and coordinating curriculum mapping and application, she knows the intricacies of working with school-community partnerships. She has been a forerunner in responding to school absenteeism, truancy, and social bonding. She has over 30 years in youth development, 20 years in dropout and truancy, and more specifically, she brings over 12 years studying, researching, presenting, and writing about absenteeism locally, nationally, and internationally. In the US she is a leader in absenteeism and understanding school attendance problems and translating such into practice models for implementation. She is forging partnerships in colleges to establish the area as a formal field of study.

Posted in BlogsTagged Attendance, Attendance-Improvement, Attendance-Intervention, Chronic-Absenteeism, Intervention, Proactive, Proactive-Intervention, School, Students, TruancyLeave a Comment on Preventing Absenteeism: Methods | Tools | Messaging

Guide to Attendance Improvement

School and district leaders are called upon to handle many diverse duties throughout their days, months, and year. It’s easy to feel like, “we don’t have time to plan” amidst the immediate concerns clamoring for our attention. But failing to plan results in minor missteps at best, and major problems at worst. That’s why putting time in on the front end will help prepare leaders to face unexpected challenges and avert serious complications later on. Attendance planning is no exception. It must be embedded within and aligned to other comprehensive plans in the district to be successful. The Definitive Guide to Student Attendance Improvement has taken a lot of the guesswork out of the planning process for you. It contains three quick-to-read sections with several reproducible activities that are easily customizable to your own setting. All you have to do is pull together your team and get started!

Download and Share the Complete Guide

Challenges of Chronic Absenteeism

Student attendance, on the surface, may appear to be clear-cut and straightforward in that it’s undeniable that tardies and absences have a significant impact on a child’s academic outcomes. If students are not present in class on time and ready to learn, then falling behind is a real likelihood. But that’s not all. Frequent absenteeism or chronically missing school has further-reaching effects on a young person’s well-being, and the causes need to be diagnosed individually to get at the root of the problem, and for educators and families to appropriately intervene.

While it is important to closely track attendance and re-engage students whose absences are escalating, it is equally important to understand the reasons before applying remedies. Quite often, student and families are unaware of the varied resources a school may offer to make it easier for them to attend school regularly. Schools and districts have to be highly proactive and hands-on in uncovering the origins of poor attendance behaviors. This will help the district team to quickly allocate the appropriate resources for the student to help them overcome the challenges they are encountering.

Building Absenteeism Intervention Plans

Mechanisms should be in place to ensure that students are quickly connected with available resources. After that, processes for tracking the outcome and following up after the resources have been applied must also be incorporated. It is essential that intervention plans are in place for preventing truancy, reducing excessive excused absences, preventing chronic absenteeism, discouraging excessive tardies, and tracking course or period attendance. These plans drive how and when an intervention will be triggered for students and how the campuses will document them. Consistency in intervention provisioning and centralization of data ensure quick assistance and allocation of resources to every student who may be struggling with attending school regularly.

Student attendance is the collective responsibility of all district stakeholders. The best curriculum in the world isn’t effective if students are often missing from school. Therefore, new practices and processes must be adopted so that student attendance is of equal importance to the best teaching and learning environments. The key to a successful plan is when leaders take ownership in changing their schools’ culture. In the following sections, we will demonstrate multi-faceted ways that districts can structure their own Attendance Action Plans most suitable to their localized needs. Using this guide will equip attendance support teams with the elements they need for developing an actionable plan for implementation. 

 

About the Author

Dr. Kim Wallace is a professional educational consultant with Process Makes Perfect. She started her career in public education 27 years ago as a high school instructor before going into site and district administration. She most recently served as the superintendent of a large San Francisco Bay Area district. Kim consults, writes, and presents on the topics of leadership, curriculum and instruction, policy and protocol, and future trends in education. 

Posted in BlogsTagged Attendance, Attendance-Improvement, Chronic-Absenteeism, RaaWee-K12, RaaWeeK12, Student-Attendance, Students, TruancyLeave a Comment on RaaWee K12 provides The Definitive Guide to Attendance Improvement

The Challenge

Yesterday and today are different. For many, the difference is like night and day. This is the case for those who experience mental health challenges versus those who do not. It is not the same as having a bad day. It’s hard to describe.

Watch Full Event Video

Student Attendance and Mental Health

The gap between yesterday and today can feel strikingly different for individuals grappling with mental health challenges compared to those who do not. This distinction extends beyond merely experiencing an occasional bad day; it encompasses a deeper internal struggle that significantly influences how we feel, think, and behave. For children, these mental health issues frequently manifest as changes in their daily routines and academic performance, leading to increased absenteeism. Alarmingly, statistics reveal that 50% of all mental disorders begin to develop before a child reaches the age of 15, making early intervention crucial for effective student attendance improvement.

Chronic Absenteeism and School Resources

Schools serve as vital institutions where students learn essential skills, ranging from reading and writing to problem-solving and social interaction. They also provide crucial support services for children while their parents work. However, many students lost access to these essential resources during periods of disruption, which included not just education but also food services, health care from school nurses, opportunities for social development, and activities that foster teamwork and discipline. Additionally, students missed out on learning important life skills related to self-care, hygiene, time management, and the cultivation of their identities. The transition to online learning allowed for the continuation of academic instruction, yet it largely failed to address the remaining 80% of the holistic support that schools traditionally offer. This lack of comprehensive care compounded issues of chronic absenteeism, leaving both students and parents feeling constrained and overwhelmed. As a result, there was a notable increase in mental health issues, particularly among those students who continued to miss school.

Attendance Improvement Strategies

To effectively support students who are grappling with mental health challenges and chronic absenteeism, schools can adopt a variety of targeted strategies designed to address these pressing issues. Implementing initiatives focused on attendance improvement can help cultivate a supportive environment that encourages regular attendance and promotes overall well-being among students. By identifying and addressing the root causes of absenteeism, schools can create tailored interventions that not only enhance student attendance but also contribute positively to their mental health and academic success.

Context

The numbers are still rolling in but UNICEF reports that over 332 million children were linked to the COVID-19 lockdown policies. Many students were absent or affected ‌ mentally or physically, from the shutdown, closure, or online delivery of schools during the pandemic.

The impact was of catastrophic proportions with an underlying problem–mental health. For students and teachers, the states of mind, body, place, ability, and connection were disrupted during the pandemic.

Levels of context and feelings around many generalized everyday terms like:

Student Attendance and Holistic Support

To effectively respond to all states of what was disrupted, schools must expand their focus beyond just academics. It is essential to reintegrate play, fun, music, poetry, and role modeling into the school experience, utilizing community partners and actively engaging parents. Convening task forces can provide the necessary support, but the American Council on Education suggests that attention should also be directed toward enhancing overall campus culture and climate. This approach aims to promote, improve, and foster positive mental health and well-being while increasing awareness and access to services. Changes to policies and protocols for supporting mental health are crucial in this effort. The overarching goal remains the same: to help students express their thoughts, normalize questions and concerns, build relationships, and maintain connections. UNICEF Director Forte emphasizes the urgency, stating, “Many children are left feeling afraid, lonely, anxious, and concerned for their future. We must emerge from this pandemic with a better approach to child and adolescent mental health, and that starts by giving the issue the attention it deserves.”

Attendance Improvement through Understanding Mental Health

Mental health encompasses a range of mixed disorders, conditions, and symptoms, often associated with impaired socioemotional development or linked historically or diagnostically. Empirical outcomes for students experiencing absenteeism include behavioral changes and school attendance problems, which can manifest as school avoidance, withdrawal, refusal, truancy, or even dropout. These behaviors can arise from various stimuli, such as avoidance, escape, attention-seeking, or the pursuit of rewards outside of the school environment. The factors surrounding mental illness can be both risk and protective, but they are often cumulative and represent a bundled risk.

The Impact of the Pandemic on Absenteeism

During the pandemic, the effects of bundled risk became glaringly evident in both time and space. In terms of time, we witnessed changes characterized by scarcity, poor time management, limited self-care, and a breakdown in collaborative care—often referred to as outsourcing. Outsourcing care is a hallmark of modern society, where we rely on partners to address various needs: schools educate, restaurants provide meals, healthcare professionals offer medical services, sports and events furnish entertainment, and churches and daycares offer community and care for our loved ones. However, the pandemic and subsequent lockdowns drastically altered this outsourcing dynamic. These changes blurred boundaries, leading to increased crises and emotional outbursts, further complicating the landscape of student attendance and mental health.

Actions for Schools

Most common intervention is Cognitive behavior therapy to respond to anxiety, depression, self-efficacy, emotional distress, social-emotional, academic development. However, Psychosocial Intervention, Narrative Therapy, Motivational Interviewing, Parental Counseling, and Family Therapy are also options.  Yet providing resources and education on spotting and responding to somatic complaints (stomachache, feeling unwell or resistive behavior (temper tantrums, violent behavior) are also universal resources that can be offered.

Citation

Gentle-Genitty, C. (January 27, 2022). Mental health factors for students who miss school. Every Day Matters Summit, TX. DOI: https://doi.org/10.7912/pgm6-qq04
 
Dr. Carolyn Gentle-Gennity, PhD, Butler University
Carolyn Gentle-Genitty, PhD | Indiana University School of Social Work | cgentleg@iu.edu

About the Author

Dr. Carolyn Gentle-Genitty, founder, lead consultant, and Chief Education Officer for Pivot Attendance Solutions, has inspired many administrators, educators, students, and school social workers as a past chair of the school’s concentration Masters Curriculum, tenured professor, and Director of the Bachelors for Social Work Program. Having worked closely with Indiana Department of Education to assist school counselors in acquiring a school counselor license and coordinating curriculum mapping and application, she knows the intricacies of working with school-community partnerships. She has been a forerunner in responding to school absenteeism, truancy, and social bonding. She has over 30 years in youth development, 20 years in dropout and truancy and more specifically she brings over 12 years studying, researching, presenting, and writing about absenteeism locally, nationally, and internationally. In the US she is a leader in absenteeism and understanding school attendance problems and translating such into practice models for implementation. She is forging partnerships in colleges to establish the area as a formal field of study.

Posted in BlogsTagged Attendance, Attendance-Improvement, Chronic-Absenteeism, RaaWee-K12, RaaWeeK12, School, Student-Attendance, Students, TruancyLeave a Comment on Mental Health Factors for Students Who Miss School

Posts navigation

Older posts
Newer posts

Recent Posts

  • Attendance Works Toolkits and Resources Review 2024-25
  • Guess Less, Know More: Turning Attendance Data into Real Student Support
  • Beyond Solo Acts: How Teams Supporting Schools Orchestrate Attendance Success
  • The Essential School Attendance Team: Weaving Success for Every Student
  • Every Day Matters in Duncanville ISD: The Tale of 2 Attendance Models
OUR MISSION

RaaWee K12 Solutions, solely focused on the challenges of Chronic Absenteeism and Truancy for more than 10 years, provides RaaWee K12 Attendance+ to educational institutions and their leaders for foolproof tracking, simplified outreach, timely 2-way communication, barrier-solving collaboration, simplified document preparation, powerful data analysis, and centralized storage tools that result in successful Student Attendance Improvement.

SOLUTIONS

  • RAAWEE ATTENDANCE +
  • MILOGs

DISTRICT PARTNERS

  • PARTNER LIST
  • TESTIMONIALS
  • CASE STUDIES

BEST PRACTICES

  • PREVENTING CHRONIC ABSENTEEISM
  • ACHIEVING ATTENDANCE IMPROVEMENT
  • PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

VIRTUAL EVENTS

  • EVERY DAY MATTERS SUMMIT

RESOURCES

  • WHITE PAPERS
  • VIDEOS
  • NEWS & BLOGS
LOGO FOOTER
Facebook Linkedin
OUR MISSION

RaaWee Attendance+ (also known as RaaWee K12 Truancy & Dropout Prevention System (TDPS)), is a comprehensive collaboration platform, that implements student attendance and participation improvement strategies. The most robust and scalable platform provides school districts with essential best practices and robust tools for preventing chronic absenteeism and truancy, regardless of the District’s education delivery model – Online, At-School Learning, or Hybrid.

SOLUTIONS

  • RAAWEE ATTENDANCE+
  • MILOGs

DISTRICT PARTNERS

  • PARTNER LIST
  • TESTIMONIALS
  • CASE STUDIES

BEST PRACTICES

  • PREVENTING CHRONIC ABSENTEEISM
  • ACHIEVING ATTENDANCE IMPROVEMENT
  • PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

VIRTUAL EVENTS

  • EVERYDAY MATTERS SUMMIT

RESOURCES

  • WHITE PAPERS
  • VIDEOS
  • NEWS & BLOGS
LOGO FOOTER
Facebook Linkedin
© Copyrights RaaWee K12 Solutions | Privacy Policy
Dr. Carolyn Gentle-Genitty

Dr. Carolyn Gentle-Genitty, founder, lead consultant, and Chief Education Officer for Pivot Attendance Solutions, has inspired many administrators, educators, students, and school social workers as a past chair of the school’s concentration Masters Curriculum, tenured professor, and Director of the Bachelors for Social Work Program. Having worked closely with Indiana Department of Education to assist school counselors in acquiring a school counselor license and coordinating curriculum mapping and application, she knows the intricacies of working with school-community partnerships. She has been a forerunner in responding to school absenteeism, truancy, and social bonding. She has over 30 years in youth development, 20 years in dropout and truancy and more specifically she brings over 12 years studying, researching, presenting, and writing about absenteeism locally, nationally, and internationally. In the US she is a leader in absenteeism and understanding school attendance problems and translating such into practice models for implementation. She is forging partnerships in colleges to establish the area as a formal field of study.

Dr. Kim Wallace

Dr. Kim Wallace, professional education consultant with Process Makes Perfect, and author of Leading the Launch, published by Solution Tree in September 2021, outlines a field-tested ten-stage process for successfully vetting and sustaining new initiatives in schools and districts. Dr. Wallace’s book shares a developed structure to regulate programs, protocols, and adoptions districtwide. This process was the result of her career in public education of almost three decades, starting as a high school teacher and instructional coach before moving into site administration. After earning her doctorate from UC Davis in 2012, Kim was promoted to Director of Instructional Technology in Davis, CA and then Assistant Superintendent of Instruction in Fremont, CA. In 2017, she became the superintendent of Fremont Unified—one of the top twenty largest districts in California—where Kim discovered a true passion for creating systems to navigate organizational progress. A deft strategist and expert who has served in four diverse districts, Dr. Wallace believes that her “personal and professional purpose is helping educators (re)claim their power to positively transform our schools and districts from the inside out.”

DOWNLOAD BROCHURE

Please Fill out the form and receive TDPS Brochure & a White Paper on how to reduce Chronic Absenteesim and Truancy using Technology.

Request Demo