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Overview of Attendance in Colorado
STUDENT ATTENDANCE
Attendance matters! Daily attendance and engagement in learning is essential to student success at all grade levels. Colorado law directly connected to attendance focuses on compulsory school attendance, truancy and school finance. Important student attendance definition of rates and terms include:
Truancy: Truancy is defined as an unexcused absence. The rate is calculated by dividing the reported Total Student Days Unexcused Absences by the Total Student Days Possible.
Habitually Truant (Student Count): A student is counted as habitually truant if the student has four unexcused absences in one month and/or 10 absences in one school year.
Chronically Absent: A student absent 10 percent or more of the days enrolled during the school year is chronically absent. All absences are included – unexcused, excused and suspensions. The rate is the percentage of students enrolled who are chronically absent.
CHRONIC ABSENTEEISM:
Attendance is important at all levels within the K-12 education system. For preschool, students with good attendance develop skills and good attendance habits to prepare for kindergarten. By third grade, children who missed too much of kindergarten and 1st grade fall behind in reading. Chronic absenteeism in middle school is a warning sign that students are on a path to disengagement and dropping out. In ninth grade, attendance is a clear predictor, more than test scores that a student will leave before completing high school.
Improving school attendance and addressing chronic absenteeism aligns with Colorado Department of Education (CDE) mission and strategic plan. In Colorado in 2021-22, 1 in 3 students was chronically absent.
EVERY STUDENT SUCCEEDS ACT (ESSA):
As part of Colorado’s state ESSA plan, CDE uses student level attendance data as part of the calculation for Comprehensive Support. To learn more about ESSA in Colorado, please click here
COLORADO ATTENDANCE DATA:
Colorado collects and reports on attendance data in four main categories at the school, district and state level: attendance rate, truancy, habitually truant, and chronic absenteeism (at the district and state level only). See how your school or district compares to state data on the Attendance Information webpage.
|
State Attendance Rate |
State Truancy Rates |
Habitual Truant Count |
Chronic Absence |
2017-2018 |
92.5% |
2.8% |
117,109 |
24.3% |
2018-2019 |
92.3% |
3% |
140,360 |
22.5% |
2019-2020* |
92.8% |
2.7% |
53,584 |
22.6% |
2020-2021 |
91.9% |
5.2% |
138,423 |
26.0% |
2021-2022 |
90.2% |
3.6% |
96,679 |
35.5% |
2022-2023 | 90.8% | 3.5% | 90,453** |
31.10% |
*Attendance data was collected August 2019 – March 2020
**The process for count of students was updated in 2022-23 to avoid potential duplicate counts.
Colorado Attendance Law
School Attendance Act – Residence of child (§22-1-102, C.R.S.)
- Every public school shall be open for the admission of all children, between the ages of five and twenty-one years, residing in that district without the payment of tuition.
School Attendance Act – Compulsory School Attendance (§22-33-104, C.R.S.)
- Requires that each child between the ages of six and 17 shall attend public school unless otherwise excused.
Standardizing Truancy Reporting and Expanding the Resources (§22-33-104, C.R.S.)
- Requires the Colorado State Board of Education to adopt guidelines for the standardized calculation of unexcused absences of students from school.
School Attendance Law of 1963 - Truancy Court (§19-1-104, C.R.S.)
- Allows a criminal justice agency investigating a matter under the "School Attendance Law of 1963" to seek, prior to adjudication, disciplinary and truancy information from the juvenile's school.
Truancy enforcement (§22-33-107, C.R.S.)
- Requires school district to have policy for a truancy plan with the goal of assisting the child to remain in school.
FINANCE ACT OF 1994 (§22-54-103, C.R.S.)
- “Pupil enrollment" means the number of pupils enrolled on the pupil enrollment count day within the applicable budget year, as evidenced by the actual attendance of such pupils prior to said date.
STRATEGIES AND BEST PRACTICES:
CDE collects information on best practices for addressing and responding to attendance. These resources are provided to help schools and districts organize efforts and are not required practices.
References and Materials:
Dropout Prevention Best Practice Guide References
Dropout Prevention and Student Re-engagement office
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