Chicago Sun-Times

Thousands of CPS students yet to attend virtual classes this fall

- BY NADER ISSA, EDUCATION REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa

Chicago Public Schools officials are still working to get thousands of students into online classes two weeks into the school year, a sign that obstacles to learning still exist for some and that many families may have transferre­d out of the district this fall.

The school system’s chief education officer, LaTanya McDade, said at Wednesday’s monthly Board of Education meeting that as many as 6,900 children were still missing from virtual classes in the 300,000-student district at the end of last week.

McDade said not all those students who haven’t attended classes have been “lost” and not contacted.

“Some of those students have transferre­d outside of the district or transferre­d to charter as well,” McDade said.

CPS spokeswoma­n Emily Bolton said later Wednesday the number of students marked “did not arrive” was actually 2,680 last Friday and said the figure was typical and not due to the pandemic.

“This is not a phenomenon of remote learning circumstan­ces; every year there is wide variation between the first and 20th day of school, which is why CPS and other large urban districts calculate final enrollment after students have been in school for a couple of weeks,” Bolton said in an emailed statement.

Board President Miguel del Valle asked McDade how the district would connect with those students who still hadn’t been reached.

Del Valle said it would be important to identify the exact reasons students haven’t been reached.

McDade said CPS central office employees, bus aides and other workers have been calling families every day to find out where their children are and what resources they need to get back in school. Safe Passage workers have handed out almost 60,000 flyers in various communitie­s, and security guards have been trained and repurposed for home visits to check on families if they can’t be reached by phone.

McDade said CPS decided to back off a policy that in typical years would almost immediatel­y drop students who didn’t show up on the first day of school. Students classified as “Did Not Attend” were instead dropped from enrollment two weeks into this school year.

Had the original policy been left intact, McDade said, about 49,000 students might have been dropped from CPS for not attending classes that first day.

CPS released data last week that showed about four of every five students logged on for the first week of school, a markedly higher rate than in the spring despite first-day attendance still dipping from previous years.

In all, 84.2% of registered students attended remote classes the first day of school, down from an average first-day attendance of 94.3% the previous four years.

Attendance districtwi­de rose the second day of school and then reached 90.2% by the third day.

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