Do attendance rules benefit students?

Controversy around recent attendance rules

March 30, 2023

Newly-enforced attendance policies work against us

In an attempt to increase attendance, Park administrators decided to clamp down on their rule book. Although no new protocols were established, students are only now being made aware of an important attendance policy: a parent or guardian can excuse their child for missing school, but only for ten days or less. Once a student surpasses their 10-day limit on parent-excused absences, they are required to turn in a doctor’s note. 

It’s important to note that the 10-day limit on parental-excused absences is not Park’s rule, but Hennepin County’s. Where Park went wrong was randomly enforcing it over halfway through the school year. This is not fair to anyone — staff included.

10 days may sound like a lot, but between minor illnesses, family events and vacations, missing 10 days of school over the course of nine months is nothing. 

I was out with the flu in November and missed a week of school. I couldn’t muster up enough strength to get out of bed, let alone leave the house. Despite being miserable, I didn’t feel the need to see a doctor because I didn’t have any life-threatening or prolonged symptoms. Just from that, I knocked off half of my allotted days to miss without a doctor’s note. 

Because Park requires a doctor’s note for illnesses, having a cold or a migraine won’t cut it — a student has to actively visit a doctor in order to be excused. It’s perfectly reasonable for a student to catch colds, COVID-19 and/or the flu throughout the school year. These situations are not normally severe enough to warrant a doctor’s visit, but they also make going to school difficult. And for the record, going to the hospital is expensive and many families don’t have the money or the time for it when it comes to minor issues.

Not only is going to school sick a bad idea, it’s something that is consistently discouraged at Park. Ever since the COVID-19 pandemic began, students are expected not to come to school with any symptoms of illness. If they stay home, though, they are reprimanded for skipping. These mixed messages are endlessly frustrating.

Even in situations where a student did actually visit the doctor, they might not be able to prove it after the fact. I can’t speak for everyone, but I imagine most students didn’t bother asking for a doctor’s note when they were under the impression that a parent/guardian could excuse their absence. Those of us who didn’t get a doctor’s note for any and all previous appointments are now stuck in the mud.

Whether you are attending or working, being in high school already comes with its fair share of troubles. This unnecessary worry only adds to an overflowing pool of stressors. The out-of-the-blue reinforcement of an attendance rule that was never made clear is ridiculous. If Park’s administration wants to double down on this specific policy, they should have been more transparent from the get-go. They should have made a point of this in the beginning of the year, rather than partway through the second semester. The lack of communication from administrators makes it hard to justify what they are doing. 

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When students don’t attend class it can cause declining grades, which results in students struggling with work. Being in class is important because having an education is a privilege, and unless you can’t be in class for a serious matter then you should attend.

A majority of high schoolers eventually plan on going to a community college or university that requires a high school diploma or a General Development Education diploma (GED).

Even companies may ask for a background check to see current schooling and work ethic if you have a high school diploma or a GED.

If someone does end up skipping class for no reason, they may need to do makeup work, which can become a habit for not committing to something. According to Middle Earth “Studies show that students who skip more than ten days of school are 20% less likely to graduate and 25% are less likely to enroll in college.”

It’s beneficial for students to be in class, and if they aren’t, there can be repercussions. This rule will help motivate  students to be on time and present in class. These rules aren’t exactly popping up out of nowhere, and I think that they are being enforced now because of rising absence rates and the administrators wish to ensure all young adults have access to a good education. Also, if these rules had been enforced more, like other schools in the area, it wouldn’t be as big of a deal to students now.

I don’t think that it’s hard to be able to attend class, it’s just that people don’t want to for various reasons. Personally, as a senior who also does Post Secondary Education Option (PSEO) at Normandale Community College, I have to be accountable for my own time. I have to work outside and inside school and the only times I’m not in class is when I have doctors appointments where they don’t mind giving me a note. 

Yes, these newly enforced rules have come up now, but maybe they are trying new things to see if students follow them for future years. With less emphasis on covid-19 and the pandemic in schools, Park might want to have a sense of normalcy in the school. It’s only because it was never enforced with previous principals that it’s now coming up. It’s better to have these newly-enforced attendance rules in place to better people’s education.

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