The influence over truants
Mark Gleason
We asked our parent panelists: District attorney officials were the
target of parent anger this week because of what the parents deemed
heavy-handed tactics in dealing with truant students. What are your
thoughts on the district attorney’s involvement in the truancy
problem in which parents were told they and their children could face
jail time?
There’s a difference between aggressive and heavy-handed. The way
this particular situation was handled was definitely heavy-handed,
but the underlying idea of an aggressive approach to truancy is
sound.
Kids need to be in school. Parents own most of the responsibility
for making sure they go to school and stay there. Ideally, sound
values instilled at an early age will help kids understand and
appreciate school.
Involved teachers and caring administrators should be able to
guide students to responsibility. Campuses need to provide a
welcoming and safe environment.
Whether one lives in that perfect world or not, one thing will
never change: many kids will skip school. They’ll walk in one door
and out the other. They know how the waves are breaking or how nice
it is at the beach.
They’re tricky little buggers and sometime the only way to get
their attention is with aggressive handling. However, that doesn’t
mean rounding up all the usual suspects in a room with the district
attorney and sheriff and bludgeoning them with a PowerPoint
presentation showing truancy as the onramp to the road to hell.
A PowerPoint full of statistics does sound pretty hellish in its
own right. Perhaps that’s part of the solution. Maybe if they just
told all the truants that they would have to watch the PowerPoint
over and over again in a darkened detention room they would see their
folly and repent.
The big-blitz approach probably seemed like a good way to cut a
wider swath and generate attention. The attention part sure worked,
but on its own the attention won’t make a dent. Truancy really does
need to be handled on an individual basis.
There are common threads, but each kid’s situation is different.
School administrators need to get serious with both parents and kids
earlier. If that doesn’t work, they need to then bring these other
agencies into play and keep the pressure on.
* MARK GLEASON is a Costa Mesa resident and parent.
If the school district and district attorney can jointly deal with
chronic truants and their parents, that is a good thing. But because
this is a new program, the district could have gone the extra mile
and given the parents advance warning and allowed them the
opportunity to respond to the unexcused absences. Parents are
rightfully angered by the district’s use of intimidation to get their
attention.
This situation brings out the tension that exists between parents’
rights and state enforcement of compulsory attendance laws.
The state has a vested interest in children attending school, but
parents still have discretion over their children’s lives. If a
parent believes there is a good reason their child should not attend
school, then that is the parent’s prerogative. But what a parent
thinks is a good reason may not fit with the school’s definition of
excuses, and that creates a conflict. In some cases, there may be
logical explanations for the absences. However, if a student is
ditching behind the parent’s back, then the school should intervene.
The district does have a way to deal with habitual truants and
their parents, called the Student Attendance Review Board, made up of
administrators and teachers who meet with parents and truants. It is
not clear if all the parents who attended last week’s meeting had
been through the review board process. The district attorney’s
program would be a logical next step after the review board.
It’s too late to undo the damage. The heart of the matter is about
whether we are shifting into a more authoritarian role, where the
state is becoming more of a parent and taking over parental
responsibilities. The state bureaucracy isn’t set up to be
compassionate or merciful to parents.
For this reason, many are turning to home schooling where state
interference is minimal and parents maintain authority over their
children. This issue should remind those in our schools to learn and
follow the state’s rules, ask questions and speak out when they feel
the state is overstepping its authority.
The parents last week were right to be offended.
* WENDY LEECE is a Costa Mesa parent, former school board member
and member of the city’s parks and recreation commission.
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