Title: MMSD Attendance Trends: Hmong-Speaking High School Students
1MMSD Attendance Trends Hmong-Speaking High
School Students
- August 29, 2005
- MMSD Board of Education
2Purposes of todays discussion
- Share information about attendance trends of
Hmong-speaking students in MMSD - Describe action plan for addressing these trends
- Solicit input into a plan of action
- Obtain feedback
3Legal Parameters for Attendance Policies
- Compulsory Attendance (WI Stat. 118.15) All
students between the ages of 6 and 18 are
required to attend school regularly during the
full period and hours, religious holidays
excepted, that the public or private school is in
session.
4Legal Parameters (cont)
- Habitual Truancy (WI Stat. 118.16) Applies to
all students that are absent from school without
an acceptable excuse for part or all of 5 or more
days on which school is held during a school
semester. - Truancy Madison Mun. Ord. 23.45 (2)(d) a pupil
who is absent from school without an acceptable
excuse for part or all of any day on which school
is held.
5BOE Policies on Attendance
- Legitimate Reasons for Absence
- 1) A student who is physically or emotionally
unable to attend school - Examples illness, bereavement (BOE 4031)
- 2) Good Cause (BOE 4031)
- Examples Medical appointments, religious
holidays, weddings, inclement weather, principal
approved absences. - All other absences can be considered unexcused.
-
6DISTRICTWIDE PRIORITY
- In order to maximize learning, the building of
social relationships and participation in school,
MMSD BOE established the goal that all students
attendance exceed the rate of 94 (lt12 absences
per year). - Both excused and unexcused absences are included
in determining this rate.
7Progress Towards Goal
- Consistent attention on student attendance for
past 8 years - Steady Improvements across all levels
- Improvements in consistently applied policies and
procedures
8Average Attendance RatesProgress towards Goal of
94
- Elementary
- 1997 95.7 2004 95.6
- Middle School
- 1997 93.6 2004 95.2
- High School
- 1997 90.3 2004 93.3
9Hmong-Speaking Students
- There are currently 1122 students that
self-identify as Southeast Asian in MMSD (K-12).
- Of these students, 859, or 76 are
Hmong-speaking. - 361 Hmong-speaking students are in grades 8-12
10Elementary Attendance
11MIDDLE SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
- Middle school students as a group have met the
94 attendance rate goal for the past 5 years. - The ethnic subgroups of Southeast Asian, Other
Asian, and White, all exceeded the 94 goal in
2003-04.
12HIGH SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
- Overall, the rate of attendance remains just
below the 94 goal for high school students. The
overall high school attendance rate declined
slightly in 2003-04 from 93.6 to 93.3 due
mainly to drops among the African American and
Southeast Asian subgroups. Southeast Asian
students dropped from 90.7 to 88.5. White and
Hispanic attendance rates remained almost
unchanged from the prior year while rates for
Other Asian students increased.
13Percentage of All Students that Meet the 94
Attendance Goal
14Hmong Students that Meet the 94 Attendance Goal
15Where are our Hmong-Speaking Students?
- High Schools 9-12
- East 111 Students
- Lafollette 66 Students
- Memorial 54 Students
- West 42 Students
- Alt Programs 18 Students
16Where are our Hmong-Speaking Students?
- Middle Schools 8th grade only
- Black Hawk 6 Sennett 14
- Cherokee 8 Sherman 15
- Hamilton 3 Toki 9
- Jefferson 2 Whitehorse 4
- OKeeffe 5 Wright 4
17What contributes to the change in attendance
patterns as Hmong students move through their
high school years?
18What strategies are effective in supporting
students and families?
19How can schools and community agencies work
together to implement effective interventions?
20Our Plan May 2005
- Hold Community meeting 1 April 29, Kajsiab
House. Distribute notes - Conduct focus groups with Hmong students
- Conduct attendance transition conferences with
8th grade Hmong students with a history of poor
attendance
21Community Meeting 1Kajsiab House
- Highlights
- Representation from all 4 high schools and most
middle schools - Representatives from community organizations
- Small group discussions and networking
- Relationship building and identification of next
steps
22Student Focus Groups
- 20 - 25 Hmong speaking students
- May 25, 2005
- Skippers and non-skippers
23Why does attendance change?
- Trying to fit in with peers
- High school is open and allows more choices
- Students dont like the courses they are placed
in - Classes dont meet students needs
- Home problems
24Is poor attendance a problem?
- Yes! Staying in school is important
- It holds you back if you dont go
- It gives us a bad reputation
- Sometimes teachers mark our names wrongthey
stereotype us
25What might help?
- Adjust academic classes and provide choices of
classes - Place Asian students in sections where there are
other Asian students - Create a more welcoming environment for Asian
students - Be more understanding of family issues
- Address racism
26What can students do?
- Arrange for students who have skipped and dropped
out to speak to other students about their
regrets - Provide tutors and academic support
- Involve parents
- Try to motivate peers
- Do something fun!
27Attendance Transition Meetings
- Early identification of students who may need
additional support in high school - Spring interviews with 8th grade students
experiencing attendance difficulties - Make connections to high school supports, (both
student to student, and staff to student) in
order to build relationships and problem-solving
potential - Habitual Truancy Protocol
28Our Plan Semester 1, 2005-2006
- Host Community-School meeting 2 (include
students) - Share plan with secondary administrators and
student support - Conduct additional internal research
-
- Explore strategies used in other communities
29Our Plan Semester 2, 2005-2006
- Host Community-School meeting 3 (include
students) -
- Build cultural understanding and competency
- Review and develop high school structures to
support Asian students -