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Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley

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Page 1: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Absence from Australian Schools

John Ainley

Page 2: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

School attendance

• “ critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and the likelihood of further marginalisation”

• “the community that must bear the social and economic costs of students ‘dropping out’ from school”

• “little doubt that there is a strong correlation between early leaving and criminal activity, poverty, unemployment and homelessness”

• “require urgent remedial action” (House of Representatives Standing Committee on Employment, Education and Training

1996)

Page 3: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Non attendance at school

• truancy, absenteeism, school refusal, school withdrawal and under-age school leaving (‘dropping out’)

• disciplinary forms of exclusion such as suspension and expulsion

• officially enrolled but who do not attend school regularly

Page 4: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Australian schools

• Data from 1995 to 1999– (Ainley & Lonsdale, 2001)

• Data from 1999 to 2003– (Withers, 2004)

• Analysis of SA Data 1997 and 1999– (Rothman, 2001)

• ABS data for enrolments and population

Page 5: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Absence rates for five states: 1995-1999

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

Y K Y 1 Y 2 Y 3 Y 4 Y 5 Y 6 Y 7 Y 8 Y 9 Y 10 Y 11 Y 12

Year level

% A

bse

nce

(Ainley & Lonsdale, 2001)

Page 6: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

% Absence by Year Level: 1995-1999

6.96.3

5.95.3 5.6 5.5 5.8

6.7

8.0

9.4

10.2

9.0

8.0

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

Y K Y 1 Y 2 Y 3 Y 4 Y 5 Y 6 Y 7 Y 8 Y 9 Y 10 Y 11 Y 12

Year level

% A

bse

nce

(Ainley & Lonsdale, 2001)

Page 7: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

% Absences by Year: 1999 - 2003

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

Y5 A Y5 B Y6 A Y6 B Y7 A Y7 B Y8 A Y8 B Y9 A Y9 B Y10 A Y10 B

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003

(Withers, 2004)

Page 8: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Factors associated with absence

• Multi-level regression of SA primary schools

• School level– Location (non-metropolitan higher)– Social composition– Unexplained variation between schools

• Student level– Socioeconomic background (school card)– Indigenous status

(Rothman, 2001)

Page 9: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Difference ABS population & school enrolments

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

12 13 14

Age

Dis

cre

pa

ncy

1988 1993 1998 2001

Page 10: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Suspensions and exclusions• Rates

• 1.8% of the school population (1998 State A)• 2.5% to 2.7% (1996 to 1998 State B)• 5.6% to 6.7% (2000 to 2003 State C)

• Characteristics• Highest levels (44%) aged 13 to 15• Higher among males than females• Higher among Indigenous students• Lower among LBOTE students

• Reasons• Threat to order (about 40%)• Violence (about 30%)• Inattention (6%)• Substance abuse (10%)

• Uncertain generalisation• Varied policies and practices

Page 11: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Data availability

• Difficult to obtain consistent data

• Consistency in definition, policy & practice

• Reporting process in public domain• Trends over time• Patterns

• Important as an issue of access

Page 12: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

International comparisons

Page 13: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

International comparisons

• OECD PISA 2000– 15-year-olds in 32 countries– Australia 6,000 students 230 schools– Assessment and questionnaire– Thematic report: Student Engagement at School

• Measures of;• Participation in the last 2 weeks

• missed school• skipped classes• arrived late

• Sense of belonging• based on six questionnaire items

(Willms, 2003)

Page 14: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Participation scores for 15-year-olds in OECD countries

461

555

502

400 420 440 460 480 500 520 540 560 580

United States

United Kingdom

Sweden

Spain

Poland

OECD average

New Zealand

Korea

Japan

Italy

Ireland

Greece

Germany

France

Finland

Denmark

Canada

Belgium

Australia

Page 15: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Participation & belonging – PISA 2000

Page 16: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Associations from PISA 2000

• Variation between schools• Correlations at school level

– Belonging and participation r = 0.37– Participation and achievement r = 0.50– Compositional effects (SES context)– Higher levels:

• disciplinary climate,• relations with teachers &• expectations for student success

• Correlations at student level– Weak correlation between belonging & participation– Socioeconomic status and belonging– Sex and participation

(Willms, 2003)

Page 17: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Engagement - PISA 2000

• Clusters of students• Top students – 26%

• High achievement, high engagement

• Engaged students – 27%• High engagement, slightly lower achievement

• Students feeling isolated – 20%• Low sense of belonging, fairly high achievement

• Absentee students – 10%• Low participation, high absence rates

• Non academic students – 17%• Low literacy skills (>1 sd), low sense of belonging

• Differences among schools• Interactions not structures

Page 18: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Participatory engagement – Australian secondary schools

• Individual• Participation related to attitude to school• Participation related to academic motivation• Females higher than males• High SES students more engaged

• School• Engagement related to school climate• Overall engagement influences individual engagement• Variation among schools (9%)• Single sex schools

(Fullarton, 2002)

Page 19: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Policy and practice

Page 20: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Initiatives

• Two broad approaches– Surveillance

– Systematic data compilations– Monitoring and follow up– Discipline policies– Options for suspended students– Communication

– Curriculum and learning– School climate and active forms of learning– Focus on the middle years– Inclusiveness– Points of contact– Catering for diverse aspirations & approaches

Page 21: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Promoting engagement: Research perspectives

• School level• Opportunities to participate (Newmann, 1981)

• Multiple points of connection (Finn, 1989)

• Classroom level• Teacher academic & personal support• Authentic pedagogy (Newmann et al, 1992)

• Challenging & extended tasks (Fredericks et al 2004)

Page 22: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Engagement & school completion

• Perspective – Lack of engagement– Withdrawal from activities– Missing classes– Truancy– Non-completion

Disenchantment Disengagement Disappearance

• Evidence– USA

• Finn (1989)• Bryk & Thum (1989)• Rumberger (1995)

– Australia• Ainley & Sheret (1992)• Marks et al (2000)

Page 23: Absence from Australian Schools John Ainley. School attendance critically important not only for the individual who suffers educational disadvantage and

Conclusion

“To catch and to hold”(Dewey)