Need a practical way to respond to attendance issues? Check out our course, Truancy 101!

What Is Truancy?

Truancy refers to unexcused absences from school and is a leading indicator of long-term academic and social disengagement. Chronic absenteeism remains a nationwide crisis, with roughly 10.8 million K–12 students estimated to be chronically absent during the 2024–25 school year—still far above pre-pandemic levels (Diliberti, 2025). Unlike excused absences due to illness or family emergencies, chronic absenteeism—missing 10% or more of the school year—often signals deeper systemic or personal challenges that students face daily. Understanding the root causes of student absenteeism, including mental health concerns, bullying, transportation barriers, housing instability, and family responsibilities, is the first step toward effective truancy intervention.

Truancy is not just a legal issue—it’s an early warning sign of disengagement that can lead to school dropout, justice system involvement, and diminished life opportunities (Balfanz & Byrnes, 2018).

When students miss school, it’s easy to assume they’re simply choosing not to attend. But behind the data point of “absent” lies a web of often invisible barriers—mental health challenges, peer pressure, transportation issues, and family responsibilities.

Truancy isn’t always a willful act of defiance; in many cases, it’s a sign of deeper, unmet needs.

Understanding and addressing these factors is the heart of Truancy 101, a course designed to intervene with compassion and insight, rather than punishment.

What Causes Student Absenteeism?

Truancy 101 helps students uncover and address the root causes of their absences. These often fall into four categories:

Family Responsibilities: Caregiving duties, especially among older siblings, can interfere with regular attendance. Truancy 101 supports students in goal-setting and problem-solving around these complex roles.

Mental Health Challenges: Anxiety, depression, and school-related stress can severely impact attendance. A 2022 CDC report found that 42% of high school students felt persistently sad or hopeless, and those students were more likely to miss school (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2022).

Peer Pressure and Bullying: Students may skip school to avoid bullying or to align with peer norms around disengagement. Truancy 101 encourages students to reflect on their social circles and empowers them to seek help from trusted adults.

Transportation and Housing Instability: Many students lack reliable transportation or face housing insecurity, making consistent attendance difficult. According to the National Center for Homeless Education (2021), homeless students are chronically absent at nearly twice the rate of their housed peers.

A Student-Centered Truancy Intervention Solution

What sets Truancy 101 apart is its empathetic, evidence-based approach. The course is designed to help students:

  • Reflect on personal attendance patterns
  • Identify and categorize the reasons for missing school
  • Develop strategies to overcome barriers like screen time overuse or lack of adult support
  • Create an actionable attendance improvement plan

By supporting the “whole student,” rather than punishing the behavior, Truancy 101 aligns with trauma-informed educational practices and court diversion programs.

Frequently Asked Questions About Truancy

What is truancy?

Truancy refers to unexcused absences from school and is often linked to chronic absenteeism, disengagement, and long-term academic risk.

What causes chronic absenteeism?

Common causes include mental health struggles, bullying, transportation barriers, housing instability, caregiving responsibilities, and lack of school engagement.

How can schools reduce truancy?

Schools can reduce truancy through early intervention, trauma-informed support, attendance tracking, counseling, family engagement, and alternative educational programs.

Why is truancy a serious issue?

Students who are chronically absent are at higher risk for lower academic achievement, dropping out, and juvenile justice involvement.

How Truancy 101 Supports Students and Schools

For courts and agencies, Truancy 101 provides a compliant, trackable intervention with measurable outcomes. For educators and counselors, it’s a Tier 2 support that fits within Multi-Tiered Systems of Support (MTSS). For families, it’s a chance to re-engage their child with school in a meaningful, nonjudgmental way.

Addressing the hidden causes of absenteeism is not only compassionate but essential for keeping students on the path to success. With Truancy 101, we move from blame to understanding—and from missed days to better futures.

See how Truancy 101 helps students reflect on attendance and understand the impact of missed school.

References

Balfanz, R., & Byrnes, V. (2018). Using data and the human touch: Evaluating the NYC Inter-Agency Campaign to Reduce Chronic Absenteeism. Johns Hopkins University School of Education.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2022). Youth Risk Behavior Survey: Data Summary & Trends Report 2011–2021. https://www.cdc.gov/healthyyouth/data/yrbs/pdf/YRBS_Data-Summary-Trends_Report2021_508.pdf

Diliberti, M. K., Chu, L., Rainey, L. R., DiNicola, S. E., Lake, R. J., & Schwartz, H. L. (2025, August 14). Chronic absenteeism still a struggle in 2024–2025: Selected findings from the American School District Panel and the American Youth Panel | Rand. Chronic Absenteeism Still a Struggle in 2024–2025. https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RRA956-34.html

National Center for Homeless Education. (2021). Federal Data Summary: School Years 2016–17 through 2018–19. https://nche.ed.gov