The Scourge of Absenteeism: Oregon Kids of Color Are Cutting Too Many Classes

Our children are not alright.

In the 2015-16 school year, alarms went off when one in six K-12 children were chronically absent at Oregon’s public schools.. 

The legislature was so concerned it enacted a bill which directing the Oregon Department of Education and the Chief Education Office to jointly develop a statewide education plan to address the problem. 

So much for that. 

In the 2021-2022 school year, the most recent year for which data is available, 36.1% of Oregon’s K-12 students were chronically absent from school, absent for  more than 10% of the academic year. Only Hawaii at 37%, Michigan at 38.5% and the District of Columbia at 48.1%, had higher rates of chronic absenteeism.

Children who are chronically absent in their early years of schooling are likelier than their peers to struggle to read at grade level by the end of second grade and students still struggling at the end of third grade are four times more likely to drop out of high school, according to research supported by the Annie E. Casey Foundation and the Center for Demographic Analysis, University at Albany, State University of New York.

For the worst readers, those who could not master even the basic skills by third grade, the rate is nearly six times greater. 

By the ninth grade, every week a student misses reduces that student’s chance of graduating by about 20 percentage points.

“The fact that absenteeism has gone up is the biggest issue right now and has been overlooked,” says the Lewis-Sebring Director of the UChicago Consortium on School Research, Elaine Allensworth. “People keep focusing on the test scores, but our research shows over and over again that student attendance is an incredibly strong predictor of pretty much every outcome you care about: High school graduation, college ready, college enrollment, college graduation. It’s vital that students actually come to school every day.”

Oregon media have reported on rising absenteeism, but the general take has been that it is a system-wide problem.  What they’ve mostly missed is the high rates of absenteeism among kids of color.

An exhaustive review of Oregon Department of Education data on absenteeism at Oregon school districts in the 2021-2022 school year reveals substantial differences in rates of absenteeism between white students and students of color.

“The long-term consequences of disengaging from school  are devastating,” says Hedy Chang, executive director of Attendance Works, a nonprofit addressing chronic absenteeism. For children of color, the consequences can be particularly severe.

In other words, for all the money Oregon is pouring into its schools to improve the academic performance of kids of color, it’s not going to make any damn difference if kids of color don’t show up.

School DistrictCategory% Chronically Absent
Corvallis School District 509J         White33.5
Hispanic/Latino43.5
West Linn-Wilsonville SD 3J               White27.9
Black/African American32.9
Hispanic/Latino43.9
American Indian/Alaska Native76.2
Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander45.2
North Clackamas SD 12                         White28.5
Black/African American33.2
Hispanic/Latino41.1
American Indian/Alaska Native40.5
Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander50.8
Gladstone SD 115                                        White32
Black/African American 46.7
Hispanic/Latino52.3
Astoria SD1                                                     White35.1
Hispanic/Latino43.1
American Indian/Alaska Native58.3
Bend-LaPine SD1                                               White39.6
Black/African American40
Hispanic/Latino54.5
American Indian/Alaska Native49.3
Redmond SD 2J                                                         White37.8
Hispanic/Latino43.4
Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander47.8
American Indian/Alaska Native57.4
Douglas County SD4                                                   White44.4
Hispanic/Latino50.4
American Indian/Alaska Native62.9
Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander54.5
Springfield SD19White41.9
Black/African American52.3
Hispanic/Latino47.9
Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander72.3
Salem-Keizer SD 24JWhite39.7
Black/African American41.9
Hispanic/Latino53.7
Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander63.7
Portland SD 1JWhite27.1
Black/African American55
Hispanic/Latino47.1
American Indian/Alaska Native68.8
Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander63.1