Directory
Contact Name | Department | Job Title |
---|---|---|
Marise, Steven | District | Federal Programs Director, Student Services Coordinator, Assessment Logistics Coordinator (DTC) |
The school year for students is 180 days, and student attendance at school is important every one of those days! Your child’s learning is directly linked to being in class every day. To ensure that every child and parent knows how important it is to attend school daily, Tennessee has a Compulsory School Attendance Law (TCA-49-6-3001) which requires all children ages 6-17 inclusive to attend school each day.
Tennessee requires schools to have a multistage intervention program designed to address truancy problems. The first stage of intervention starts when a student has been absent without a valid excuse for five days in an academic year. Among other things, the student and parents will attend a conference with school officials, be required to sign an attendance contract, and attend follow-up meetings. If the problems continue, interventions will ramp up to include things like Saturday courses, community services, and teen court (but not suspensions).
If the intervention plan isn't successful and the student's parent isn't willing to cooperate with the plan, the school may report the truant to juvenile court, where the student could come under the court's jurisdiction as an "unruly child." In some local school districts, referral to the juvenile court is required when the plan isn't working.
In addition, schools will formally withdraw any students who’ve had 10 unexcused absences in a row (or a total of 15 during a single semester), which means they won’t be able to advance to the next grade. Teenagers who’ve been withdrawn from school will also have their driver’s license suspended or won’t be able to get one until they turn 18. (Tenn. Code §§ 37-1-132, 49-6-3007, 49-6-3009, 49-6-3017 (2019).)
Because parents are legally responsible for sending their children to school, they could face misdemeanor charges for educational neglect. If they're found guilty, they could be fined and/or sent to jail—up to $50 and/or 30 days for each day the child skipped school. (Tenn. Code §§ 40-35-111, 49-6-3009 (2019).)