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On the Path to Success: Policies and Practices for Getting Every Child to School Every Day

Policy Paper #3 in OSI-Baltimore’s Student Attendance Series

Source:
OSI-Baltimore
Author:
Jane Sundius and Molly Farneth
Date:
September 19, 2008

In the United States, there is just one publicly funded youth opportunity program that is universally available: the K-12 public school system.  And for children who are poor, have special needs, or struggle academically, schools provide additional essential supports and services, such as access to educational materials, nutritious meals, and basic health services.  They also provide youth opportunities to make friends and to get to know college-educated, employed adults—their teachers.

Regular school attendance is critical; in fact, without it, youth are very unlikely to graduate from high school, escape poverty, and stay on course for a productive future.  For these reasons, school attendance is a bellwether for a city's future.

This paper, the third in OSI-Baltimore's Student Attendance series, is intended to provide communities, particularly cities, with strategies and policies that will increase the number of students in school each day. As in the first two papers, Baltimore is used as an example to highlight both the problem and possible solutions to frequent school absence.

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On the Path to Success
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Policy Paper #3 in OSI-Baltimore’s Student Attendance Series.

Other Papers in This Series

An Epidemic of Student Absence: How Can We Get Kids to School?
Jane Sundius and Molly Farneth
September 19, 2008
A summary of research prepared by OSI-Baltimore that explores the problem of student absence and offers recommendations for policies and practices to boost student attendance.

Missing School: The Epidemic of School Absence
Jane Sundius and Molly Farneth
September 19, 2008
This paper, the first in OSI-Baltimore's Student Attendance series, reviews local, state, and national data on habitual truancy and chronic absence, including who is absent, why, and what the outcomes of school absence are.

Putting Kids Out of School: What's Causing High Suspension Rates and Why They Are Detrimental to Students, Schools, and Communities
Jane Sundius and Molly Farneth
September 19, 2008
This paper, the second in OSI-Baltimore's Student Attendance series, demonstrates how the widespread use of exclusionary school discipline, specifically suspension and expulsion, adversely impacts children and youth.

You can access this page at the following URL:
http://www.soros.org/initiatives/baltimore/articles_publications/articles/practices_20080919

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