More Than 1 in 4 Kids Are Chronically Absent From School, Report Shows
Since COVID-era school closures, chronic absenteeism has increased from 15 to 26 percent, with poor districts struggling the most.

Since COVID-19 shuttered American schools, chronic absenteeism has skyrocketed, with the number of students missing more than ten percent of school days climbing from 15 to 26 percent since 2019, according to new data from the American Enterprise Institute (AEI).
While the cause of this increase is easily pinned on COVID-era online schooling, the solution to the problem has confounded school leaders, who are struggling to get students to return to school after becoming accustomed to lax online schooling.
"The tumult of the COVID-19 pandemic made one thing about education excruciatingly clear: Consistently showing up to school is good for students," writes AEI senior fellow Nat Malkus in a report discussing the new data. "The pandemic may have changed the terms of what qualifies as a crisis in education, but current chronic absenteeism levels would constitute a crisis under any terms."
Chronic absenteeism has increased across the board—affecting both wealthier and poorer districts. According to new data from the AEI, absenteeism increased from 10 percent in 2019 to 19 percent in 2023 in the richest school districts. In the poorest districts, absenteeism increased from 19 percent to a staggering 32 percent over the same time period.
Surprisingly, the length of school closures didn't seem to impact the increase in absenteeism that much. Districts that were closed the longest saw absenteeism increase 12 percent, while those with the shortest closures saw a 10 percent increase.
However, things were even worse in years closer to pandemic closures. In 2022, for example, 28 percent of students were chronically absent. Overall, absenteeism rates fell from the 2021-2022 school year to the 2022-2023 school year in 33 of the 39 states reporting data.
However chronic absenteeism levels were troublingly high even before COVID-19 school closures. "Unfortunately, consistent school attendance was a problem even before the pandemic struck," writes Malkus "Well before the pandemic, attuned observers and the US Department of Education alike characterized chronic absenteeism as a 'crisis.'"
School districts across the nation are struggling to reverse this trend. School leaders have tried everything from pajama parties to home visits in an attempt to get kids back in the classroom, with spotty success.
School officials told The New York Times that school closures normalized online schooling, where attendance was effectively optional. Since at many districts, teachers are required to post assignments online, students and parents seem to feel more comfortable staying at home.
"Our relationship with school became optional," Katie Rosanbalm, a Duke University psychologist told the Times.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Perhaps they realized the lack of value in attending public schools.
Yes I’m sure all those poor kids missing school will turn out great. They’re probably off teaching themselves to code or learning marketable skills. Or doing drugs
Think of all the drag shows they’re missing!
No, they’re much more likely to come out of their education-induced fog and realize that their lives will be much better and more lucrative if they learn a craft or trade like welding, plumbing, air conditioning and heating, electrician or construction. But elitists like you will never get that until you call for a plumber from your mom’s basement and they pencil you in for November 2025.
So tradesmen and craftsmen don't need to know how to read, do basic arithmetic, or speak standard English?
Oh, gosh! Is THAT what they've been teaching in public schools?! You could have fooled me! Most of us learned basic arithmetic and reading in the first few years of life, but if you look at the stats for the public school system, the "reading and math at 'grade level'" numbers are abysmal. Private schools do a MUCH better job. By the way, I never said EDUCATION wasn't necessary - just that the public education system was getting an "F"
If you can't manage those they will teach them at the trade school. You generally take a test to see if you have the required basic skills and where 12 years of government education has failed you they will teach, for a price of course.
My son teaches math to people prepping for the test. He has a good success rate at getting adults back up to 12th grade basic math for college.
You live here in South Dakota, right? Does your son teach here?
Why don’t you go back to Utah where you belong
We live on the west side of the state but yes, he enjoys teaching math to all ages of people.
Iwanna Newname: So college students are pretending to be illiterate? Watch the YT pop quizzes on beaches, boardwalks, shopping centers. Maybe they are trying to be funny? 1 in 10 is literate, probably homeschooled.
Sort of like the marketable skills I mentioned? Kids skipping school aren’t going to trade school on the side. Sorry to break it to you.
Odds are those skipping school are from families that don't value education. But they are doomed to begin with. If parents don't value education their kids won't get one even if they attend all 12 years of government education.
They’re probably off teaching themselves to code or learning marketable skills.
They are not learning those things in public schools.
Or doing drugs
They are doing those things in public schools.
Yup. In the High School in the next town down the interstate I have confirmation that meth is being done in the bathrooms. I suspect it's happening in the high school of this town but I have no connections in that school.
Some kids do drugs in school equals kids should be able to skip school whenever they want.
Mmmkay.
If they can decide to change genders why not.
Not what I said and you know it.
You'd think they could at least save some time and money by learning to gender, doing code, and changing drugs all at once, but no...
You're the one who brought drugs into the conversation.
26% absenteeism is progress. 100% is victory.
I realized the lack of value at 5, 1947. I boycotted school so much that I was "held over". I didn't, couldn't fail. We weren't taught reading, writing, arithmetic, therefore no test. We sat in circles singing, playing games, nothing academic. I came to learn to read.
My mother was furious with me. I was stubborn. When I am bored, I resist the pain. Nothing is more painful than boredom.
The myth of public support for education has finally been busted. If you questioned the narrative that public education must be mandatory because an educated citizenry is important for the maintenance of liberty and democracy, now you have ammunition with which to fight back. Socialism is the only thing being promoted by a publicly educated citizenry, and I hope that the tax-funded public education system dies now.
Socialism is the only thing being promoted by a publicly educated citizenry
Kids are not clay to be molded by educators. Soviets tried that and failed.
I just hope our current crop of educators fail as well.
I trust you are not denying that socialism is being promoted by the public school system. I did not say they were succeeding - but they are certainly not succeeding at educating our youth to be good citizens either.
*shrug*
I think the Hobbits have it right. They don't come of age until 33. After they've gotten through their irresponsible tweens (what Hobbits call twenties).
Yet again, Hobbits do it right. Second breakfasts, no adulthood before 33...
mwaocdoc looks around and, finding no Hobbits still in existence, shrugs in response.
sarcastic: "Kids are not clay to be molded..."?? I wasn't. Maybe you weren't. MOST are. Want proof the Prussian System of indoctrination works? They vote to be ruled. They obey and or fear authority, even when it acts immorally, disrespectfully, or demeans them. And, worst of all, young adults proudly volunteer to be cannon fodder or if drafted, quietly comply, e.g., murder and sacrifice.
What could be more horrific? Govt. ed is child abuse.
^ Word.
Think of all the children not being properly indoctrinated. So sad.
"Our relationship with school became optional,"
As it should be.
It was your idea Emma. Remember?
Gosh if we just could have heard some different viewpoints.
Kind off odd for a libertarian publication demanding bigger better compulsory government school attendance. But if some AEI guy says so it must be right. For even an average child, public schools are places where dreams, ambitions, curiosity and critical thinking go to die. Some of these truants may be better off in these institutions but at least as many may be better off elsewhere. We had a deal. Mom and dad both go to work to maintain something like a middle class lifestyle and pay ridiculous taxes to the racketeers that run these indoctrination camps and in return they get some semblance of a basic education and babysitting service. The government pissed all over the social contract and some people realized that they had better choices. None of these education professionals lost a fucking dime while they spent a couple hours a day doing online classes in their pajamas. Now they're desperate to protect their phony baloney jobs. They and their friend Emma can piss right off. Yeah we'll probably see a percentage of these kids hit a dead end but we may see more that advance the species to much better places because they are unencumbered by the stultifying 12 year sentence.
Bam!
It's like Reason isn't any kind of libertarian publication at all.
Perhaps schools were always more like concentration camps (happily only part-time), or prisons without any rule of law.
Is it any wonder that inmates, pensionaires, or prisoners, or whatever they were enjoyed their too-brief escape?
When I was a student in the 80's the atmosphere was that of a prison. We just hadn't rioted or shived anyone.
They've graduated to rioting and shiving these days. Or so I'm told.
Yup.
I grew up in St Louis, where a strange European ethic derived from exiled Germans from the revolution of the 1840's had the bizarre idea that schools were there to teach people how to be good workers well-adapted to the standards of the Industrial Revolution. Surprise, it actually didn't work out that way for many.
Maybe schools should be schools, and workers should be adults, and social theorists should just f*** off.
Less time in Public School = Less indoctrination.
More time in the world exploring = More critical thinking.
What part of this is bad?
The part where they start arresting parents for their kids skipping schools?
If the parents are home schooling or sending their kids to private schools they file paperwork with the school. The ones who have to worry are the ones who aren't bothering to wake their kids up for school.
What part of this is bad?
The part where the school indoctrinates them to avoid drugs and violence because they're harmful/hazardous. - Joe Lancaster
To be fair, most of them weren't learning anything anyway. Maybe something about pronouns and how to be a twink, but nothing useful.
As much as I want to credit this with parents realizing that the schools are failing, that they are capable of teaching as well as "professional teachers", and that their children are being indoctrinated into some real weird shit at school a part of me worries this is just the low effort parents not even bothering to wake their kids up for school.
Only 1 out of 4 are chronically absent? We'll need at least 3 out of 4 to end the abomination known as public (state) schools.
Strive for 5 out of 5.
I always strive for 1 out of 1 because that's about as much as I can keep track of.
Years ago I listened to an NPR report about a man arrested for keeping his children out of school. When the children were examined it was discovered that the children all had different views on various issues. The NPR reporter sounded very surprised about this.
Questions the reporter did not ask were: Did this man actually teach his children to think for themselves? Did he encourage disagreement and debate? What kind of society could survive without the social bonding of complete conformity?
Old Engineer: I think you meant to ask: "What society would we have without conformity?"
Our species has no chance of survival without free-thinking as the prime value.
Govt. school works to crush individualism and create political zombies, obedient, loyal slaves.
Since when has public assistance required a literacy test?
"More Than 1 in 4 Kids Are Chronically Absent From School, Report Shows."
Can you blame the kids for not showing up in a public school?
If they're not getting the living shit beat out of them by other kids, their "teachers" are too busy to take time from their naps to do their jobs and educate those sitting in their class rooms.
This was a predictable outcome. Many of the comments on the Covid 19 School shutdowns years back were about the consequences of shutting the kids down or teaching via Zoom. Unintended results are coming home to roost. Enjoy next Gen.
One of my big questions is how they define "chronic absenteeism." Is it the same across the board?
I was a landlord in low income housing in Minneapolis. I’d get to a home on a Tuesday at 10:00 am and every kid was home invariably. It would be a big surprise if they were at school. The buses would pick the kids up very late, 9:30, provide breakfast and lunch, but moms still couldn’t get off the couch to take them to the bus stop. This is the problem with busing, no community help from neighbors. But the district needs more money because the communities are not performing. How can they when the kids are home being raised by Judge Judy while the parents sleep on the couch?
Some public schools have shown themselves to be unworthy of education children.
In some public schools, the only education provided is hands-on sex ed from teachers to underage students!
Given most woke districts are eliminating gifted programs in lieu of "equity" this is just going to get worse for the entire public school grifter class.
The Educational complex in their quest to dumb down, work less and be held unaccountable accelerated their own downfall. Urban poor single moms have lost interest in sending their kids to lord of the fly's schools and middle-class families are leaving the system. And that is for the best.
Given the reading and writing levels in urban schools why even spend public monies anymore. Education is a gift from the tax payers..if the kids don't care and their single mom's don't care, don't force them to go to schools. We could save hundreds of billions of dollars just by making school option in many of these districts..hell Baltimore or Chicago could use the savings to hire more cops..a better investment.