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Skipping School

PostPosted: Wed Oct 15, 2003 9:38 am
by Iroquois
I thought this was interesting.
[quote]Skipping school the Canadian way
Author 'really surprised': Several nations with poor attendance do well on academics
 
Heather Sokoloff

National Post


Wednesday, October 15, 2003

Canadian teenagers are among the world's worst offenders when it comes to skipping school, with one in four regularly not showing up for class, according to a new report on students' feelings about school.

Only Spain, Denmark, Greece, New Zealand and Iceland report higher absentee and tardiness rates among 15 year-olds in the 28 countries surveyed by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

Students in the United States are more likely to attend class than their Canadian counterparts, with one in five admitting they regularly skip school. In the United Kingdom only 15% report unexplained absences. Students in Japan and South Korea almost never skip.

"I was really surprised," said Douglas Willms, director of the Canadian Research Institute for Social Policy in Fredericton and author of the OECD report. "I wasn't expecting such high truancy levels from Canadian students."

He said part of the problem might be that educators are putting too much attention on standardized testing.

Though most Canadian educators had no idea their students skipped more than those in other countries, everyone said absenteeism is a long-standing problem.

In Ontario, school boards are required to employ at least one attendance counsellor. The York Region District School Board, Ontario's second-largest, has nine counsellors to track down chronically absent students.

"We don't have all the answers when it comes to public education," said Bruce Nicholson, a high school principal in Abbotsford, B.C. "But the one thing we know for sure is that students who come to school do better than those who don't."

Ten years ago, Mr. Nicholson and the two vice-principals at Yale Secondary started calling up the parents of truant students each morning. The measure improved things, said Mr. Nicholson, although enough students still skip to warrant holding a full-day detention several Saturdays each month.

But if absentee rates in Canada are increasing, the recent focus on standardized testing may be partly to blame, Dr. Willms said. It is a surprising statement coming from the University of New Brunswick researcher, an advocate of provincial testing programs. He said policy makers need to remember literacy and math scores are not the only measures of a successful education system. A far more complicated factor, recently labelled "student engagement," is crucial in predicting who goes on to university and who drops out of school.

A report released last week from the Canada Millennium Scholarship Foundation, written by Dr. Willms using data from OECD tests, found half of Canadian high school students scoring in the top 40% in math and literacy do not pursue post-secondary education because they feel disaffected from school. The report found the majority of those students were from middle-class and affluent families, and felt they did not fit in at school.

Dr. Willms suggests schools undertake the difficult task of improving relations between students and teachers.

The OECD report is among the first to probe students' feelings about their learning environment in order to gauge whether a student's sense of belonging at school affects academic performance.

In the case of absenteeism, the answer is unclear. Frequently absent students are often low achievers, but not at the bottom. On average, they scored at Level 2 on a five-level literacy scale, showing at least a basic level of skill.

More surprisingly, some of the strongest performers on international tests in math and literacy -- including Canada, New Zealand and Finland -- all report some of the highest absenteeism rates in the world, with more than a quarter of students regularly skipping class.

Fewer than 15% of students in Germany and Luxembourg skip school. But those countries are hardly ones Canada would want to emulate. Both traditionally perform at the bottom of the industrial world in math and literacy tests.

PLAYING HOOKY:
Average percentage of students who skip classes

Spain: 34%
Poland: 29%
Canada: 26%
Sweden: 24%
Mexico: 21%
United States: 20%
France: 15%
United Kingdom: 15%
Korea: 8%
Japan: 4%
hsokoloff@nationalpost.com

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Wed Oct 15, 2003 10:12 am
by SaVas
I skipped school all the time in high school, but then again I found HS to be a boring waste of time without any classes that pushed the envelope, even those which were coined "Advanced Placement", but I still graduated in the top 5% of my class

College however was a different story. I loved college and what it had to offer and I only skipped when I needed to.

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Wed Oct 15, 2003 5:46 pm
by Sock
I've never skipped.   :-[  Somehow my dad would find out and I'd be in a crap load of trouble.  Wish I could skip math, I am not a mathimation.

Sock

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Wed Oct 15, 2003 6:27 pm
by Paz
 I skipped quite a bit during the year or two right before I quit high school, I didn't even care if my parents knew or not, I'd tell them straight out that I hated that f'ng place and it was only a matter of time before I didn't even bother going back at all.

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Wed Oct 15, 2003 6:57 pm
by Iroquois
[quote]I've never skipped.

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Sat Oct 18, 2003 8:36 pm
by Threadkiller
i skip every now and then (5 times since Sept2nd) and my parens till think im an agel, because i bring good marks and stuff on tests so they think i got o every class, when i dont go and the machine calls i never bother on erasing the message, i just tell them i was either late or that we had a sub teacher in the class and he was a complete moron and he marked me absent by mistake

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2003 4:22 am
by Polynomial
ive never had to skip school because i enjoy what i do . . . but i must admit, i am skipping music at the moment because we have finished all our assesment for the rest of the year and im not required to be there!!!!!

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2003 4:29 am
by Craig.
my first year at high school, i only attended about 3 weeks, i knew i would be leaving that year anyway, i hated the place, and it was their i busted my knee, so i spent most of the time at home, the following year i moved ended up here and because all the schools in the area were full i had to wait 3 months for a place at a school 10 miles away, after that i never skipped and anytime i wasnt there had a good reason.

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2003 9:00 pm
by chomp_rock
SKIPPING SCHOOL!?!? BAD BAD BAD! ;D

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2003 10:35 pm
by Tchkinjiu
[quote]I've never skipped.

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Wed Oct 22, 2003 12:39 pm
by Katahu
I have never skipped school in my entire life. I never wanted to anyways. Besides, I wanted a regular high school diploma (and I finally got it).

There were some occasions, however, that I accidentaly skipped one of my classes now and then. This is because in the first 2 years of high school, I got confused with the two lunch hours (one before 5th period and the other after). Whenever I got to class (occasionally or rarely as I progressed from 9th grade to 10th), I get this querr-eyed look from my teacher and my friends. I felt stupid at the time. LOL. But I finally get the hang of it.

There was this other time in which I, again, skipped a class by accident.

I was with my JROTC class (in 11th grade) while the FCAT was in progress (I passed the test in 10th grade. I don't have to ever take it again). Our JROTC Army Instructor told us that to kill some time, we are going to the Football field. There, these Army recruiters have these neat things already hooked up. There was this thing that you climb up like Cliff Hanger on a wall with a buzzer on the top.

There was also this 12-wheeled truck. Inside, there were these series of neat simulators (flying an apache, riding an M1A1 Abrams Tank, shooting sims, etc. NEAT).

I was all distracted for a the whole time. When 1st lunch came, I stopped and I dicided to go eat (all that exitement made me hungry. Hehe). But when 1st lunch finished, I found something out. I DON'T HAVE 1st LUNCH!!!! I have 2nd lunch. I was like, ARGH!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It happened to me again. CR@P!!!!!!!

I became more vigilant ever since. Hehe.

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Wed Oct 22, 2003 12:48 pm
by Dan
J/K!
Woz zat mean????
Dan

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Thu Oct 23, 2003 11:03 am
by Jared
lol...since I was homeschooled through highschool I don't think that I ever skipped school! NEver had snow days either though  :( :( :( :'( Instead I got good weather days, when it was nice out!

;D ;D ;D

Jared

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Thu Oct 23, 2003 12:12 pm
by Smoke2much
Woz zat mean????
Dan


If you mean "What does that mean?" it means Joke.

Will

Re: Skipping School

PostPosted: Thu Oct 23, 2003 6:48 pm
by ozzy72
DON'T skip school!!!
I caught a couple of students last year doing this, by the time I'd finished with them they were crying like little babies (odd what you can get a 17 year old boy to do if you try hard enough..... ;D)
So DON'T do it, its NOT big, its NOT clever, and you will end up being a sad muppet if you miss out on your education (of course a lot of it is total s****).

Ozzy (nasty teacher!!!! ;D)