The Day

Seven local superinten­dents sign national attendance pledge.

- — Erica Moser

Seven local superinten­dents are among the 35 in Connecticu­t and 803 nationwide to sign the Superinten­dents Call to Action, a pledge to prioritize student attendance this school year.

The superinten­dents of New London, Norwich, Groton, Stonington, Waterford, East Lyme and Ledyard are among those who signed the pledge from Attendance Works, a nonprofit with a mission of reducing chronic absenteeis­m, defined as missing more than 10 percent of school days in a year.

The call to action urges superinten­dents to make clear that improved attendance is a top priority, use data to raise awareness and track targets, and mobilize the community, such as parents, elected officials, libraries, local businesses and clergy.

Chronic absenteeis­m is one of 12 factors the Connecticu­t State Department of Education uses to assess school districts for its Next Generation Accountabi­lity System, and it’s one of the factors that got Groton named an Alliance District.

But a recent report from Attendance Works showed that on the whole, Connecticu­t fares better than most states on chronic absenteeis­m.

Connecticu­t had the fifth highest number of superinten­dents signing the call to action, after California, 133; Oregon, 97; Kentucky, 49, and Washington, 49.

Attendance Works provides tools and tips for planning, self-assessment, messaging and calculatin­g data.

Attendance Works Executive Director Hedy Chang and the heads of nine other national nonprofits had written to superinten­dents across the country urging them to join the call, citing how chronic absenteeis­m is correlated with decreased reading proficienc­y and high school graduation rates.

“By determinin­g who shows signs of chronic absence starting in the first month of school, schools and community partners can work together to help students get to class before they have missed so much instructio­n that they require academic remediatio­n,” Chang said in a news release.

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