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      Measuring School Absenteeism: Administrative Attendance Data Collected by Schools Differ From Self-Reports in Systematic Ways.

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          Abstract

          In order to use attendance monitoring within an integrative strategy for preventing, assessing and addressing cases of youth with school absenteeism, we need to know whether the attendance data collected by schools cover all students with (emerging) school attendance problems (SAPs). The current article addresses this issue by comparing administrative attendance data collected by schools with self-reported attendance data from the same group of students (age 15-16) in Flanders, the Dutch-speaking part of Belgium (N = 4344). We seek to answer the following question: does an estimation of unauthorized absenteeism based on attendance data as collected by schools through electronic registration differ from self-reported unauthorized absenteeism and, if so, are the differences between administrative and self-reported unauthorized absenteeism systematic? Our results revealed a weak association between self-reported unauthorized school absenteeism and registered unauthorized school absenteeism. Boys, students in technical and vocational tracks and students who speak a foreign language at home, with a less-educated mother and who receive a school allowance, received more registered unauthorized absences than they reported themselves. In addition, pupils with school refusal and who were often authorized absent from school received more registered unauthorized absences compared to their self-reported unauthorized school absenteeism. In the discussion, we elaborate on the implications of our findings.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Front Psychol
          Frontiers in psychology
          Frontiers Media SA
          1664-1078
          1664-1078
          2019
          : 10
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Research Group TOR, Department of Sociology, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium.
          [2 ] Centre for Educational Effectiveness and Evaluation, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
          Article
          10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02623
          6901495
          31849752
          d9464ac1-9e24-4aab-8632-b9bfd7925572
          History

          school refusal,school withdrawal,truancy,attendance data,early identification,school attendance problems

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