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Small town succeeds where Chicago fails

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Local authorities go to these lengths because absences from school in the earliest grades can have a devastating effect on children, their families and the community, as well as draining millions of dollars from school districts whose state and federal funding is keyed to attendance rates, government records and Tribune interviews show.

In Chicago alone, nearly 13 percent of the city's roughly 250,000 students in grades K-8 missed four weeks or more of school in 2010-11, while administrators could not say whether about 1,600 others had transferred to other districts or simply vanished, a Tribune investigation found.

But Chicago Public Schools eliminated its truancy outreach officers two decades ago amid budget woes and turnover among top officials. The district also has never enforced school policies that remain on the books, such as linking parents' public housing leases and welfare assistance to their children's school attendance, or taking parents to court.

Top Chicago school officials say fines and court sanctions don't reduce truancy and only worsen the lives of impoverished families. "Our goal should be helping people by lifting them up," said Jadine Chou, chief safety and security officer for CPS.

Authorities in other districts believe tough measures do help families, and they want more options to hold parents accountable.

"We believe it is a form of abuse to just not get the youngest children to school. That is irresponsible," said Cathy Elliott, an assistant principal and truancy officer in Alton, near St. Louis, where authorities use municipal tickets and court interventions and fines to fight truancy.

Making home visits

On first blush, you might not expect parallels between inner-city Chicago and Galesburg, a town surrounded by farms. It is where poet Carl Sandburg slept on a mattress of corn husks as he was raised by immigrant parents and where Ronald Reagan attended first grade at the Silas Willard School.

But life here has gotten tougher as huge factories closed and the methamphetamine trade spread like a prairie fire through counties across Illinois. The overall percentage of low-income students in Galesburg rose from 54 percent in 2009 to 62 percent two years later.

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