Staff Addressing Excessive Absenteeism and Truancy. State law requires school districts to designate and identify to the local juvenile court and to the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) a person or persons to coordinate efforts to address excessive absenteeism and truancy, including tasks associated with:
Building Bridges Program. Subject to appropriations, OSPI must provide grants to local partnerships of schools, families, and communities for a statewide comprehensive dropout prevention, intervention, and retrieval system. A Building Bridges Program means a local partnership of schools, families, and communities that provides:
Statewide Dropout Reengagement Program. State law provides a framework for a statewide dropout reengagement system known as Open Doors Youth Reengagement. A dropout reengagement program means an educational program that offers at least the following instruction and services:
Eligible students are:
OSPI must develop a model interlocal agreement and contract for the dropout reengagement system, and school districts may enter into interlocal agreements with an educational service district (ESD), community or technical college, or other public entity. The model agreement must include uniform financial reimbursement rates, per full-time equivalent eligible student enrolled in a dropout reengagement program, calculated using a certain formula.
Chronically Absent Students. Students who are chronically absent means students who miss 10 percent or more of their school days for any reason including excused and unexcused absences and suspensions.
Educational Service District Training and Coaching. Subject to appropriations, each ESD must work in collaboration with OSPI to develop and maintain the capacity to offer training and coaching for staff, including staff designated to address excessive absenteeism and truancy, on the development of robust early warning systems to identify and locate students who are chronically absent and connect them with the necessary supports to reengage them in academic learning.
Building Bridges Program. This program is updated to add supporting students who are chronically absent. When community-based organizations, tribes, and community and technical colleges are awarded grants to support those who are chronically absent, grant funds may also be used for the following strategies and supports:
OSPI may require grant funding recipients to report the impacts of their efforts in alignment with the measure of the Washington School Improvement Framework.
References to reports that have already been submitted are removed, and language is updated to align with current state law.
Statewide Dropout Reengagement Program. Examples of case management, academic and career counseling, and assistance with accessing the following services and resources are added:
PRO: The number of chronically absent students is high in this state, and it got worse during the pandemic. Absences can quickly derail students' progress, and students can feel disconnected from school. This bill provides some basic tools for schools and families to help get kids back on track with their attendance. Students cannot do well in school if they are not there. Chronic absenteeism is an early warning indicator. If this can be addressed early, it can help increase the chance of students graduating on time. Students face a variety of barriers, many of them systemic, when it comes to attending school on a regular basis, and this bill will help remove these barriers and is solutions-based and proactive. This bill will help meet students' fundamental needs such as clothing and transportation, so they can attend school. This bill promotes partnerships between schools and the community, and ESDs are ready to do this work. When elementary students develop good habits with attendance, they carry those habits into the secondary grades. This bill will help create a more inclusive educational system and help make sure students have the supports they need.
CON: The threshold for chronic absenteeism, which is 18 days during a school year, could easily be met with some sickness and vacation. This bill would allow home visits to these families, which schools should not have the authority to do.
PRO: Senator John Braun, Prime Sponsor; Pete Peterson, Kiona-Benton City SD; Erica Limon-Trefielo, Communities in Schools of Washington; Shane Backland, Association of Educational Service Districts (AESD); Dixie Grunenfelder, Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction; Mason Bryant; Keith-Ann Campbell, Big Brothers Big Sisters; Will Durden, State Board for Community and Technical Colleges; Isabella Flores, State Board for Community and Technical Colleges (SBCTC).