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Detroit District Offered Gift Cards For Perfect Attendance. 4,936 Kids Earned It

Detroit District Offered Gift Cards For Perfect Attendance. 4,936 Kids Earned It

Yahoo22-02-2025

This article was originally published in Chalkbeat.
Nearly 5,000 Detroit high school students have earned at least one $200 incentive for perfect attendance since early January.
High school students in the Detroit Public Schools Community District can earn $200 gift cards for each two-week period in which they have perfect attendance, from Jan. 6 through March 21.
There have been two cycles so far for which students have received the gift cards and, in addition to the 4,936 students who had perfect attendance in at least one of two-week periods, 2,028 have had perfect attendance in both cycles, according to data Superintendent Nikolai Vitti shared with Chalkbeat this week.
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The attendance incentive is aimed at improving attendance in the district, where two-thirds of nearly 49,999 students were considered chronically absent during the 2023-24 school year. The incentive is among a number of efforts the district has employed over the years to create an attendance-going culture among students. The district has invested heavily into attendance agents to improve attendance and this school year announced that students with extremely high rates of chronic absenteeism will be held back a grade at the K-8 level and required to repeat classes at the high school level.
The number of students earning the perfect attendance incentive is a fraction of the nearly 15,000 high school students in the district, leading one school board member to question last week whether the incentive is working. But Vitti said he is encouraged that the program is getting more high school students to class and resulting in a small decrease in the chronic absenteeism rate for high school students. He said the district and board will have to evaluate the program's success at the end of the school year.
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Chronic absenteeism has been one of the district's biggest challenges for years. The chronic absenteeism rate has declined, from a high of nearly 80% at the height of the pandemic, when quarantining rules meant many students missed school because of COVID exposure. But last school year's much lower chronic absenteeism rate of 66% still means it is difficult to have consistency in the classroom and improve academic achievement.
Students in Michigan are chronically absent when they miss 10%, or 18 days in a 180-day school year. Statewide, 30% of students are considered chronically absent, compared to 23% nationally. A recent education scorecard cited the state's rate as being a factor in students' slow academic recovery from the pandemic.
Here are some of the highlights of the students who've received the incentive so far::
3,473 students had perfect attendance during the first cycle.
3,492 students had perfect attendance during the second cycle.
About 10% already had perfect attendance.
About 4% were considered chronically absent at the time the incentive began.
About 16% had missed 10% of the school year at the time the incentive began.
About 25% had missed 5-10% of the school year.
About 44% had missed 5% or fewer days in the school year.
At a Detroit school board meeting last week, Vitti said the statistic showing that just 10% of the students who earned the incentive already had perfect attendance is an indication that 'this is not just rewarding those that have already been going to school.'
Board member Monique Bryant questioned what school leaders are doing to promote the incentive to students who haven't earned it.
Bryant suggested that data Vitti shared at the meeting showing that chronic absenteeism is down by 5 percentage points for high school students since the incentive began is an illustration that most students aren't rising to the goal of the incentive.
Vitti responded that it depends on how you look at the data.
'Right now, chronic absenteeism at the high school levels improved by five percentage points,' Vitti said. 'That means that 700 high school students are not chronically absent where they were last year. I'd also say that at least on the 97th day, our chronic absenteeism at the high school levels is the lowest it's been since the pandemic.'
The question for board members to decide at the end of the school year is whether the incentive 'is the right investment with other challenges that we have districtwide,' Vitti said. 'But I think the data is suggesting it's working for many students … but not all.'
Board member Ida Simmons Short urged the district to survey students to learn more about what is preventing them from coming to school.
The causes of chronic absenteeism are numerous and include physical and mental health reasons, lack of transportation,and lack of affordable housing. Most of them tie back to poverty. Vitti specifically cited transportation, because half of the students in the district don't attend their neighborhood school and the district doesn't provide school bus transportation for high school students, who must take city buses to get to school.
'Sometimes they're unreliable, they're late, they're too far away from where the child lives,' Vitti said.
Vitti said traditional school bus transportation for high school students 'was decimated' under emergency management and it could cost between $50 million and $100 million to bring that level of transportation back.
Another factor, Vitti said, is that for some students, school isn't relevant. Middle and high school students, in particular, 'struggle to understand, 'why am I going to school every day? How is this connected to what I'm going to I need to know for life.''
Mi'Kah West, a Cass Technical High School student who serves as a student representative on the board, said that when talking to other members of the District Executive Youth Council last week, many said students overall are excited about the incentive.
One thing that stuck out, she said, was council members saying they heard students in the hallways or on social media saying they were coming to school because they want the money.
'And, while we don't want to just say we want to come to school for the money,' West said, 'I think it's important to see that students … may have stayed home because they don't want to come to school, but they're willing to come to school now.'
Lori Higgins is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Detroit. You can reach her at lhiggins@chalkbeat.org.
Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.

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