Attendance Records, Confidential?
LindaS
1,510 Posts
I am currently working with our local high school regarding attendance issues of students. We are trying to figure some ways for students to realize the importance of regular attendance as well as address issues regarding poor attendance. One of the suggestions made by the Associate Principal was to possibly be able to obtain a copy of the parent's attendance record when meeting with parents regarding the student's attendance in the hopes that the parent will see the connection from their attendance problems (if there are any) to the student's.
I have some concerns regarding the confidentiality of the attendance record and would like some input from you regarding what your thoughts are on this.
Thanks for the help.
I have some concerns regarding the confidentiality of the attendance record and would like some input from you regarding what your thoughts are on this.
Thanks for the help.
Comments
This is one of those deals where the old question is appropriate for analysis: "What's the worst possible outcome this can have and am I prepared to deal with that?"
Unfortunately, you will likely have to confront this on a case by case basis. No two situations are alike. My husband and I are raising his son from his previous marriage...we attend all parent meetings, we are regularly at work, had good attendance records during our schooling...and our son is the polar opposite.
We are not neglecting his mental or physical needs...it's not the school's fault...he just IS what he is. And as hard as it will be, someday he'll have to really face the reality of the pattern he's created.
I wish there was a magic bullet for a wake up call...if you find it, please let me know!!!xpray
I believe that many of these cycles are passed down from parent to child. This perpetuation is insidious and rarely recognized by any current generation. It is often the case that the parents do not recognize that similar choices they made a decade or more ago have put them in situations they cannot control and that they are dooming their progeny to a similar fate.
I say work directly with the kids who hopefully still have some formative years and decisions left to them. With them you still have a chance, with the parents, it would take some form of a lightning strike to make a change.
My concerns mirrored many of yours from the standpoint of confidentiality and what it would truly accomplish. If I have an employee who has a poor attendance record at work and the child has a poor attendance record at school, would anything be accomplished by giving the school the employment information, probably not.
Thanks again for the responses. At least I know that I wasn't totally off track.
>a poor attendance record at work and the child
>has a poor attendance record at school, would
>anything be accomplished by giving the school
>the employment information, probably not.
>
Well, yes, that would accomplish several things, but none of them positive. The very least of the problems would be the confidentiality issue. If you think you've seen me go ballistic on the Forum, wait till you see me in a room where some school employee brings up my work record in a discussion of my child's school issues. x:-)
Thanks for your input.