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Baltimore study links truancy and street violence

The Nation

May 09, 2008|Sara Neufeld and Annie Linskey, Baltimore Sun

BALTIMORE — Before they fell victim to violence, students who were slain or shot had poor school attendance, according to data released Thursday by the Baltimore school system and health department.

Between 2003 and 2007, 115 youths in Baltimore were killed and 405 were victims of nonfatal shootings, health department figures show. The school system was able to retrieve attendance data going back to 1999 for 391 of the 520 victims. The health department pooled the data from the two agencies.


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The youths were absent from school an average of 46 days annually, and more than two-thirds of them had been suspended or expelled at least once.

The data are intended to illustrate the public health implications of truancy and suspension as city schools chief Andres Alonso tries to get the community involved in improving Baltimore's educational system. Alonso also is urging principals to find alternatives to suspension for nonviolent offenses to keep students off the streets.

"Many, many of our students end up as victims of homicides and shootings, and we see the correlation to the fact that they're not in school," Alonso told reporters Thursday. He said what was happening to those students was "a dereliction of duty" by the community.

The release of the information comes on the heels of several high-profile incidents of violence involving Baltimore's schools and students, which prompted Alonso to issue a public call for community volunteers.

In the latest incident, a mother interrupted a class Thursday morning at Calverton Elementary/Middle School and started a fight with the teacher.

Calverton has been under lockdown twice in the last month because of shootings in the neighborhood, and on Sunday, two 13-year-old students allegedly broke into the school. One allegedly tried to rape a staff member who was there doing extra work.

Among the findings of the review, which examined the attendance files of 83 homicide victims and 308 nonfatal shooting victims:

* Youths who became victims of homicides and shootings attended an average of 105 days of school per academic year, an attendance rate of 70%. While an academic year has 180 days, the students were only enrolled for an average of 151 days, probably indicating that they were frequently moving between schools.

* Before the homicide or shooting, 261 victims -- 67% -- had been suspended or expelled at least once.

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