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Searching for solutions to chronic truancy in county

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Robert Diviacchi, truancy outreach officer for the McHenry County Regional Office of Education, walks away from a house Friday after attempting to check on a student who has been truant most of the school year in Crystal Lake. Diviacchi handles cases with students who have missed too many days of school. (Josh Peckler – Jpeckler@shawmedia.com)

Bob Diviacchi thought he knew what to expect.

As truancy outreach officer for the McHenry County Regional Office of Education, Diviacchi deals with the worst chronic truancy cases in the county. When he accepted the role about four months ago, he had preconceived notions about the face of truancy.

They didn’t last long.

“I’ve got them from the north end of the county to the south end of the county,” Diviacchi said. “It’s not just one ethnicity, and it’s not just one background.

“I, unfortunately, had made some assumptions myself coming into the position, thinking it was going to be certain socioeconomic backgrounds. It’s not the case at all.”

Diviacchi is the ROE’s lone full-time truancy official. Along with his part-time partner, he spends his days checking in on truant students either at their schools or their homes, meeting with parents and children in an effort to find solutions to their truancy issues, and – when all else fails – sitting in court.

It’s tough to tell whether chronic truancy is on the rise or falling. No reliable countywide numbers have previously been kept – an issue the Regional Office of Education is addressing under new Regional Superintendent of Schools Leslie Schermerhorn.

Across the state, the rate of chronically truant students had dropped each year since 2009 before it jumped in 2012 from 3.2 percent to 8.6 percent, according to a report from the Illinois State Board of Education. But there’s a reason for the drastic increase.

As of July 2011, the state has tightened the standards on what constitutes a truant student. Before, a child was considered chronically truant if he or she had 18 or more unexcused absences in the past 180 days. Now, the number has been cut in half to nine – meaning that children missing 5 percent or more of their school days are counted as chronically truant.

Schermerhorn likes the change. It’s easier to turn around a child who’s skipping here or there than one stretching a prolonged absence for a number of weeks or months, she said.

“The sooner that we can identify the symptom, the sooner we can meet with the family and treat the problem,” she said.

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