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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Sunday, November 02, 2025

After nearly doubling during the pandemic, the rates of chronic absenteeism in K-12 schools are finally showing steady signs of improvement.

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Chicago students in heavily Latino and immigrant neighborhoods are missing school as ICE enforcement ramps up in their communities, new data suggests.

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-- Chalkbeat (@chalkbeat.org) Oct 31, 2025 at 4:25 PM

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More from the article ...

... "Thousands of students have returned to schools, which means that states are putting in the work," said Carl Felton, III, a policy analyst at EdTrust, a nonprofit that advocates for underrepresented students.

Felton is the author of a new report that looks at how policies in 22 states plus Washington, D.C., have helped improve student attendance. He said there are several things states are doing right, including collecting and publishing reliable data, and investing in early interventions and outreach programs instead of punitive practices.

"The things that we want to see happen are happening," he said. ...

Changing punitive practices and investing in more support

One of the areas Felton looked at was punitive practices. He said states need to ban corporal punishment entirely and ban harsh penalties like suspensions for minor infractions because they can harm the relationship between students and educators, and they can make students feel unsafe or unmotivated to come to class.

Several states, including many in the South, still allow corporal punishment in schools, and according to federal data, more than 69,000 K-12 public school students received corporal punishment during the 2017-18 school year.

"In order for a student to want to be in the school environment they need to know that they are cared for and that the adults in the building have their best interests at heart," Felton said. "You can hold students accountable without harming them."

He said research-backed services like after-school programs and mental health supports help to create a positive school climate: "These are the practices that we know can reduce chronic absenteeism because they address root causes." ...

[emphasis mine]

#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-11-02 12:39 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

- Changing punitive practices and investing in more support

Trumpers are never going to fall for that old liberal trick!

#2 | Posted by Corky at 2025-11-02 08:54 PM | Reply

In the article is the link to the data used about corporal punishment.

Students with disabilities had a 'disproportionate' number of corporal punishment.

What's missing is whether the punishment (or any) was warranted in the entire study.

I know someone who had enough of the parents complaining about their disabled child being handled hard for their terrible behavior.

Yes, your kid is the problem. When a 6'6" 220lb man has to deal with biting, kicking, and abuse from your kid, your kid is a problem. They had enough of them and you.

It's why teachers in the field of spec ed are scared of students. The teachers were thrilled to have a behemoth man in the room. The guy quit. Ain't worth the trouble

www.ed.gov

#3 | Posted by Petrous at 2025-11-02 09:26 PM | Reply

"You can hold students accountable without harming them."

How?

Changing punitive practices and investing in more support

Where has this worked? Even EU drug policy is stick and carrot.

#4 | Posted by oneironaut at 2025-11-02 10:16 PM | Reply

Don't bother telling the educational brain trust in Okiehomie about this. They are still big on corporal punishment, detention, pointing fingers and telling children they are bad, and forcing them to read the Bible. Ryan Walters may be gone, but the feces he smeared on the wall of every public school in the state remains...

#5 | Posted by catdog at 2025-11-03 09:38 AM | Reply

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