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Small town succeeds where Chicago fails

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(MCT) — Moving from Chicago's South Side to a public housing development in this city of 32,000 was a major culture shock for Keona Lee.

For one thing, she never expected to find a truancy officer at her door, asking why her second-grade daughter had missed one day of school.

"In Chicago they don't do that," said the single mother, who has lived in Galesburg for five years. "In Chicago they don't care. Your second-grader isn't coming to school, they don't come to the house to see what's going on. That's one kid they don't have to worry about."

While Lee struggled to get the willful 7-year-old to school as required by Illinois law, the truancy officer returned several more times, then issued Lee a $75 ticket.

The intervention exasperated Lee, but she admits that it worked.

"I made sure she got to school every day since then," said Lee, whose daughter is now in third grade.

While Chicago has all but abandoned anti-truancy programs for elementary students, districts across Illinois — from Lake, Will and McHenry counties to Murphysboro, in southern Illinois, and Galesburg, near the Iowa border — are using an array of tools to get students back in school.

Outreach workers who make home visits and provide services can help reduce truancy, records and interviews show. With rising rates of child poverty and homelessness contributing to the problem, sometimes the fix is as simple as an alarm clock or winter boots.

Other cases can be dauntingly complex. Some children are kept out of school to serve as surrogate caretakers for younger siblings. Others come from families roiled by domestic violence, mental illness or homelessness, where the adults lack the will or wherewithal to get their kids to class.

For problems the outreach workers can't solve, regional school authorities convene truancy hearings with the student and his or her family to hammer out attendance strategies and contracts.

And if need be, indifferent parents can be held accountable through tickets like the one issued to Lee — or, in the most extreme cases, through misdemeanor charges against the parents, or juvenile court actions that allow judges to order supportive services or impose sanctions.

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