Key points:
Chronic student absenteeism has reached troubling new heights in the post-pandemic K-12 landscape, with one in four students in many systems now missing significant class time. To date, the institutional response has been both predictable and insufficient. School systems nationwide have intensified compliance efforts with an expanding array of tech tools, tightened attendance policies, increased monitoring, and escalated warnings to families, all in the name of sound logic that dictates that learning requires attendance.
Yet after more than three decades in education as a teacher, coach, principal, and superintendent, I have come to believe absenteeism is not primarily a compliance problem to be solved with a mixture of new tech tech tools and more rules; it is an engagement problem that signals a deeper breakdown in student engagement.
When students disengage from school to the point that they stop showing up, their absence becomes more than an entry in an absentee report. It is a signal that something deeper may be happening in the student’s life. It tells us something about whether students feel known, valued, or meaningfully engaged in the work of learning. Chronic absenteeism rarely begins with a student deciding to break a rule. More often it reflects a gradual erosion of engagement.
This understanding aligns with what Phil Schlechty, noted education researcher, speaker, and school-improvement advocate, described years ago when he wrote about student engagement. According to Schlechty, students invest effort in learning environments where the work feels meaningful and where they feel respected as participants in that work. When schools rely primarily on compliance structures, students may follow rules, but they do not necessarily become committed learners. Attendance reflects that distinction.
Despite this, many districts still approach absenteeism as a compliance issue. Letters are mailed home, attendance thresholds trigger automated warnings, and escalating interventions, or even legal consequences, may be applied. These actions create the appearance of accountability, but they do not necessarily restore engagement.
By the time a student begins missing school regularly, something in the learning experience has usually already deteriorated. A student may feel invisible in the classroom. A family may be navigating an eviction process, a parent may be grappling with unemployment, or a student may be in the midst of a mental health crisis, all of which could complicate daily routines and impact attendance. In addition, for some students, school becomes a source of frustration rather than success because of repeated academic failure.
A compliance response cannot repair those conditions. But human-centered engagement can.
Some districts are beginning to rethink their approach to chronic attendance, and their work offers a blueprint worth examining. In Ecorse Public Schools in Michigan, district leaders have reframed attendance as an indicator of student engagement rather than a disciplinary metric. Their strategy focuses on stronger partnerships with families, collaboration with community organizations, and ensuring that every student has a trusted adult who notices when they are absent.
The focus is not punishment. The focus is presence, and that difference matters.
When students know that someone at school genuinely notices when they are missing, the interaction changes. A simple question, such as, “We missed you yesterday. Is everything okay?” communicates something powerful. It signals that the student matters. Over time, that sense of being noticed and valued strengthens engagement with the school community.
This shift in thinking also has implications for the broader education sector. For many years, the education technology market has mirrored the compliance model used by schools. Attendance platforms track patterns, generate alerts, and produce dashboards that show which students are missing school. Data systems provide useful information, but information alone does not create engagement.
Data can reveal where disengagement exists, but it cannot replace the human relationships required to address it. Some organizations are beginning to rethink their role in this work. Companies such as Concentric Education are focusing on helping school systems build deeper partnerships between schools and families rather than relying primarily on procedural responses. Their approach begins with a different question: instead of asking how schools can enforce attendance, they ask how schools can rebuild the conditions that encourage students to reengage with learning.
District leaders would benefit from reframing how absenteeism is discussed within their school systems. Instead of asking how attendance policies can be enforced more aggressively, leaders might ask a more useful question. Which students are disengaging from school, and who within our system is responsible for helping them reengage?
That question changes the strategy.
Dr. Luvelle Brown, Superintendent, Ithaca City School District
Luvelle Brown Ed.D is Superintendent of the Ithaca City School District in New York. He has served as a teacher, principal, and superintendent committed to advancing student engagement, equity, and relationship-centered school cultures. Dr. Brown is a national speaker and author whose work focuses on leadership, belonging, and creating school communities where every student feels valued.
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