
N.B. chronic absenteeism numbers are high — but one district sees promising improvement
CBC
The problem of chronic absenteeism in schools is growing, according to a document released by the province earlier this week.
And it's an issue that the Anglophone North School District has been trying to urgently address.
"Last July and August, when we kind of looked back at our absenteeism, we were hitting about 48-per-cent chronic absenteeism," said district superintendent Dean Mutch.
That percentage isn't far off from the rest of the province, which is why Mutch said he was not surprised to see the numbers released by the government.
An action plan released Tuesday aimed at addressing issues in the anglophone education system said in the 2022-2023 school year, just over 37 per cent of New Brunswick children in kindergarten to Grade 5 were chronically absent.
That number increases to 45 per cent for middle and high school.
According to the document, chronic absenteeism is when a child misses more than 10 per cent of scheduled school days, approximately equivalent to four weeks over the school year.
The plan says an absence intervention model will be developed to help schools respond to children who are "identified as at-risk for increased absences."
But Mutch has already been doing something similar in Anglophone North.
He said they developed a plan in August, which was introduced to staff and teachers and agreed upon.
Since implementing that plan, he said chronic absenteeism in his district has dropped to around 29-30 per cent from 48 per cent.
Mutch said the plan targeted kids who were missing school without reason.
"We understand kids get sick, we understand there's hospital appointments, all that," he said. "But it was a group of kids that we couldn't put our thumb on — why are they missing school?"
The plan required teachers to call the child's home after five missed days, not necessarily consecutive, to see if something was going on and if there was anything they could do to help.

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