New data provided by the Ontario government show that only about 40 per cent of high school students in the province met the standard for attendance in the past school year, down 20 percentage points from pre-pandemic levels.
The standard is attendance on 90 per cent of school days in any given year. Those who don’t attend at least that frequently are considered chronically absent.
The new numbers were released Wednesday, two days after Ontario Education Minister Paul Calandra tabled sweeping legislation that, among other policy changes, would make high school attendance count for a sizeable portion of a student’s final grade. Students would not be penalized for excused absences, including religious holidays and illnesses.
Educators expressed concern on Wednesday that the measure would do little to address the underlying issue of chronic absenteeism.
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Research has shown that attending class regularly is one of the biggest predictors of academic achievement. The chances of graduating high school and going on to postsecondary school diminish for students who have missed more than 10 per cent of a school year.
Kelly Gallagher-Mackay, an associate professor at Wilfrid Laurier University who focuses on education policy research, said more targeted interventions, including academic and social supports for students who are struggling and don’t attend school, have been shown to be more effective.
Chronic absenteeism, she said, is often tied to other issues, including health and social challenges. “What you want is students to realize they want to be there because they’re learning, not because of a transactional reward system,” she said.
Mr. Calandra defended the changes at Queen’s Park on Wednesday.
“There has to be consequences for not attending. There has to be consequences for bad behaviour. And I think over the last number of years, we’ve fallen away from that,” he told reporters.
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He said the policy would also take into account that some students are not regularly attending school for a host of reasons, including disabilities or mental health issues, and indicated that teachers will have some discretion to adjust participation marks.
“The regulations that we put in place will respect the fact that there are many challenges that people will face, and they shouldn’t be penalized for those,” he said.
“A student should be in school. If you can be there, you should be in class. You should be learning. You should be participating.”
Under the province’s proposed changes, participation and attendance would count for 15 per cent of final marks for Grades 9 and 10, and 10 per cent in Grades 11 and 12. Currently, attendance does not factor into grades.
The data provided by the government on Wednesday showed that among Grade 12 students roughly 30 per cent met the attendance standard, down from almost 50 per cent of students in the pre-pandemic years. There was a similar percentage-point drop in Grade 9, where 45 per cent of students met the standard in the last school year, compared with almost 70 per cent prior to the pandemic.
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Prof. Gallagher-Mackay acknowledged that attendance is an issue in schools. Her research has shown that as early as Grade 4 it can be a predictor of whether students participate at the postsecondary level.
“It’s a really big problem. I am completely convinced we need to address attendance. I’m just trying to say let’s try and not address it in a way that is harmful to vulnerable students,” she said.
In recent years, many school boards across the province have cut back on attendance counsellors to manage their budgets. They work with those at risk of dropping out and try and guide them back to the classroom.
Martha Hradowy, president of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation, which represents 60,000 teachers and education workers, said her board in the Windsor area was among those that scaled back those positions. Other boards have also cut social worker positions, she said.
Ms. Hradowy said the data on student attendance is concerning. However, the government’s approach, she said, “misses the mark.”
“Students don’t disengage without reason. They disengage when they’re struggling, when they don’t feel supported or when a system isn’t meeting their needs,” she said.
The student-attendance data, she added, “should be a wake-up call about the unmet student needs and not an excuse, in my opinion, to impose punitive measures.”