Record #: R2013-178   
Type: Resolution Status: Failed to Pass
Intro date: 2/13/2013 Current Controlling Legislative Body: Committee on Education and Child Development
Final action: 5/20/2015
Title: Call for hearing(s) regarding truancy in Chicago Public Schools
Sponsors: Mitts, Emma, Chandler, Michael D., Burnett, Jr., Walter, Ervin, Jason C., Graham, Deborah L., Dowell, Pat
Topic: COMMITTEE/PUBLIC HEARINGS - Committee on Education and Child Development
Attachments: 1. R2013-178.pdf
Related files: R2015-407
RESOLUTION

WHEREAS, Truancy is a growing problem in the Chicago Public School system;
and

WHEREAS, In the 2010-2011 school year, the most recent school year for which information is available, it is estimated that 13 percent of the city's roughly 250,000 children in grades kindergarten through eighth grade missed four weeks or more of school; and

WHEREAS, Although the Chicago Public Schools has a Department of Attendance and Truancy to seek ways of encouraging children to attend school, truant officers were eliminated two decades ago due to budget cuts; and

WHEREAS, There are serious consequences that follow from children not attending school. School funding is linked to the number of students who attend school each day. The Chicago Public School system could lose significant funding due to poor attendance. Additionally, when children miss school, especially in the early grades, they fall behind their classmates who attend school on a regular basis. This further discourages children from attending school as they get older, since they find school to be too complex. Additionally, when children aren't in school, many of them tend to fall into the gang culture; and

WHEREAS, Other school districts across the Nation have addressed the issue of truancy in their school systems by identifying the causes of truancy and taking corrective actions to promote higher attendance; and

WHEREAS, Issues which have been linked to truancy across the Nation have included: bullying, which intimidates students and discourages them from going to school on a regular basis; not having a safe route to school on days in which gang shootings have occurred recently; a household environment which does not encourage children to attend school on a regular basis; not being able to keep up with the class work due to falling behind in the early grades due to truancy; and not being able to attend school on inclement days due to lack of proper attire such as a pair of boots, a winter coat or an umbr...

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