The Boston Globe

Since lockdowns, skipping school remains a crisis

26% of students were chronicall­y absent last year

- By Sarah Mervosh

a few years ago, a troubling phenomenon began to spread in Us education: students were not showing up to school.

This was not particular­ly surprising. schools had shut down in the spring of 2020, at the start of the pandemic, and some did not fully reopen until fall 2021. Quarantine­s for CoViD-19 symptoms and exposures were still common. it would take time, many thought, to reestablis­h daily routines.

what is surprising is how little the numbers have budged since.

before the pandemic, about 15 percent of Us students were chronicall­y absent, which typically means missing 18 days of the school year, for any reason. by the 2021-22 school year, that number had skyrockete­d to 28 percent of students. last school year, the most recent for which national estimates are available, it held stubbornly at 26 percent.

in interviews, many educators say the problem is continuing this school year.

Perhaps most strikingly, absenteeis­m has increased across demographi­c groups, according to research by nat malkus, a senior fellow at the american enterprise institute. students are missing more school in districts rich and poor, big and small.

even the length of school closures during the pandemic was not a particular­ly useful predictor of absenteeis­m. on average, districts that were closed longest have experience­d similar increases as those that opened sooner.

school leaders, counselors, researcher­s, and parents offered many reasons for the absences: illness, mental health, transporta­tion problems. but underlying it all is a fundamenta­l shift in the value that families place on school, and in the culture of education during the pandemic.

“our relationsh­ip with school became optional,” said katie Rosanbalm, a psychologi­st and associate research professor at Duke University.

To some degree, this is a problem facing society at large since the pandemic. anyone who works in an office with a flexible remote-work policy will be familiar with the feeling: You diligently show up, but your coworkers aren’t there. what’s the point?

something similar may be going on in schools.

Though school buildings are open, classes are in person and sports and other extracurri­cular activities are back in full, the stability of school seems to have shifted.

for one thing, teachers are also missing more school, often because of profession­al burnout or child care challenges — or because, since the pandemic, more people are actually staying home when they’re sick.

some schools have kept their pandemic policies around online class work, giving the illusion that in-person attendance is not necessary.

and widespread absenteeis­m means less stability about which friends and classmates will be there. This can beget more absenteeis­m. for example, research has found that when 10 percent of a student’s classmates are absent on a given day, that student is nearly 20 percent more likely to be absent the following day. “we are seeing disengagem­ent spreading,” said michael a. Gottfried, a professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia who has studied this issue.

This cultural shift is not simply a hit to perfect attendance records.

The share of students missing many days of school helps explain why Us students, overall, are nowhere close to making up their learning losses from the pandemic. students who are behind academical­ly may resist going to school, but missing school also sets them further back. These effects are especially pernicious for low-income students, who lost more ground during the pandemic and who are more negatively affected by chronic absence.

absenteeis­m is also closely linked to other challenges schools have faced since the pandemic, including a rise in student anxiety and behavioral problems.

“The pandemic increased stress in every way in our lives, but it really embedded ourselves in our stress response system — fight, flight, or freeze,” Rosanbalm said.

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