2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2017.08.008
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Truancy in the United States: Examining temporal trends and correlates by race, age, and gender

Abstract: Background Truancy has long been regarded a common problem in urgent need of effective intervention. Knowledge about factors associated with truancy can guide the development and implementation of interventions. Method This paper examined trends in truancy rates between 2002–2014 and correlates of truancy across racial/ethnic groups. Variables of interest included sociodemographic factors (e.g., age, gender, socio-economic background), behavioral factors (e.g., substance use, violence), and psychosocial fact… Show more

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Cited by 79 publications
(77 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
(60 reference statements)
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“…For example, Havik et al (2015) reported a tendency for youth with special educational needs to explain their own absences in terms of truancy rather than school refusal. Maynard et al (2017) reported divergent risk patterns for different racial/ethnic groups of truanting youth. One finding was that non-Hispanic White youth using illicit drugs were at higher odds of truanting relative to those not using illicit drugs, whereas this difference was not observed among African-American youth and Hispanic youth.…”
Section: Absenteeism In Disadvantaged Populationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…For example, Havik et al (2015) reported a tendency for youth with special educational needs to explain their own absences in terms of truancy rather than school refusal. Maynard et al (2017) reported divergent risk patterns for different racial/ethnic groups of truanting youth. One finding was that non-Hispanic White youth using illicit drugs were at higher odds of truanting relative to those not using illicit drugs, whereas this difference was not observed among African-American youth and Hispanic youth.…”
Section: Absenteeism In Disadvantaged Populationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Absence rates tend to increase as students get older and move through school, peaking in high school (Hancock et al, 2013;U.S Department of Education, 2016;Skedgell and Kearney, 2018). Links between gender and absenteeism are somewhat mixed and may differ by type of SAP (Havik et al, 2015;Maynard et al, 2017;Skedgell and Kearney, 2018). Race and ethnicity are also associated with chronic absenteeism, with US national data showing American Indian, Pacific Islander, and Black students more likely to be absent for three or more weeks compared with their White peers (U.S Department of Education, 2016).…”
Section: The Kites Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies have underlined the higher prevalence of absenteeism among ethnic minorities (15) and noted that SAPS among children of immigrants may be a manifestation of systemic discrimination, which could be interpreted as school exclusion (16). Bourdieu and Passeron, in the early 1960s, theorized about the role of school systems in the reproduction of social inequalities (17).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, many youths live in tumultuous households, and do not have the stability in their lives to be present at school consistently (Wilson et al, 2008). A substantial portion of absentees come from an economically disadvantaged position (Reid, 2013;Maynard et al, 2017), and living in or near poverty can limit a student's ability to attend in a number of ways, such as: lack of transportation; little money for food, clothes, and/or school supplies; frequent housing disruptions; living in dangerous and crime prone areas; involvement in the criminal justice system; having to earn an income; and, the perceived irrelevance of education (Hinz et al, 2003;Nichols, 2003;Brandibas et al, 2004;Branham, 2004;Darmody et al, 2008;Leonard, 2011;Marvul, 2012). Schools too cause absenteeism.…”
Section: Absenteeismmentioning
confidence: 99%