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CHILDREN OUT OF SCHOOL IN AMERICA A
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Copyright If.> October 1974 by the
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People Who Worked Oft This Report .
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Portland, Maine CDF staff Cambridge
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Foreword Introduction Chapter 1 Cha
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CHAPTER 1 Table I CHAPTER 2 Table I
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community leaders concerned with ed
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dren were suspended. The next highe
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described in this report, they can
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needed to improve and unify state c
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Bureaucratic Excuses for Inaction Y
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problems. Are teachers encouraged o
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Who Are the Children Out of School?
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vary. But while many of them descri
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Maxine, 14 Maxine Dolan is 14 and h
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until the new school year. Meanwhil
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awake until morning when the sounds
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He's had his chances, foreign or no
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Theresa, 12 Theresa Engler, a 12-ye
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34 Table I Children Not Enrolled! B
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Proportion of Minority Children 2 T
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Social and Economic Factors Poor ch
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Limitations of Census Data Our anal
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We found children out of school in
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.". 0\ Table VIII Chlldren Out of S
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VI o Table X All Children Out uf Sc
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Total % of Areas Surveyed Children
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Chapter 3 Barriers to School Attend
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TABLE I STATUTORY AND CONSTITUTIONA
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ter the four months because the cou
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Truancy Laws penalizing children an
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A Denver school official stated: "Y
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officers who spoke Spanish, and onl
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The principal of Lincoln Junior Hig
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For example, as of October, 1972, i
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think there is enough counseling, e
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fees required to take, for example,
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did not have books were not much of
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Consider what this would mean if yo
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no money to feed and care for all o
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Apparently a judgment has been made
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ecome self-sufficient adults are th
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In Cambridee, Massachusetts, an att
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Inadequacy of Special Education Pro
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over again for four or five years.
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Janice has not been suspended this
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ased. 56 They are modeled and norme
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chusetts counselor pointed out that
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that the city does not experiment w
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1. The use of many kinds of people
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abuse laws of the state. However, t
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116
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Many districts still have the power
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In contrast to the majority of publ
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The same pattern of secondary suspe
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Racial Discrimination in the Use of
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One southern school official admitt
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tion of the limitation on numbers o
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hold hearings, the reaction was sho
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or programs that operate as alterna
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complaints to the federal Office fo
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APPENDICES
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• most children who are instituti
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as opposed to every second, third,
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. Census Tract 123 Census Tract 123
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newal. Every third household was mo
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-secondary school children by sex a
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10. Are his special problems/needs
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Sheet E-l SCHOOL EXPULSIONS, SUSPEN
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Maine Portland Census Tract 11 I 1:
- Page 197 and 198: ALABAMA State Officials Mr. William
- Page 199 and 200: Mr. Milton Ogle, Associate Director
- Page 202 and 203: Sumter County #2 School Officials D
- Page 204 and 205: AppendixD STATE SCHOOL OFFlCIALS' R
- Page 207 and 208: Los Angeles Unified School District
- Page 209 and 210: AppendlxE u.s. CENSUS DATA Table I
- Page 211: State Wisconsin Wyoming GRANO TOTAL
- Page 214 and 215: AppendixE U.s. CENSUS DATA Table II
- Page 217: .... \C 00 AppelldixE U.S. CENSUS D
- Page 221: AppendixE u.s. CENSUS DATA Table II
- Page 242 and 243: Appendix 6 RANK ORDERS OF AREAS IN
- Page 249: Kansas I Failure to None Child No Y
- Page 252 and 253: 230 State Tennessee Texas Utah Verm
- Page 254: 232 State Utah Vermont Virginia Was
- Page 258 and 259: A.ppendix M STUDENTS ENROLLED IN ED
- Page 260 and 261: AppeltdixM STUDENTS ENROLLED IN EDU
- Page 262: Walker I 9,671 8,924 745 2 230 164
- Page 266 and 267: Appendix M STUDENTS ENROLLED IN EDU
- Page 268 and 269: AppendixM STUDENTS ENROLLED IN EDUC
- Page 270: tv ... 0\ Appendix LJI STUDENTS ENR
- Page 273 and 274: 3,051 1,767 1,284 102 29 73 Camden
- Page 275 and 276: Greene I 2,385 545 1,838 2 63 6 57
- Page 281 and 282: Claiborne I 2,380 109 2,271 64 2 62
- Page 283: Leflore 1 5,127 644 4,476 7 37 37 I
- Page 286 and 287: AppendixM STUDENTS ENROLLED IN EDUC
- Page 288 and 289: Appendix M STUDENTS ENROLLED IN EDU
- Page 290: APPENDIX M FOOTNOTES 11973-74 stude
- Page 293: EnroUments in Qasses for Trainable
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I. Exclusion-Right to Education I.
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existing state law is unclear and w
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Pending Federal Cases: Stewart v. P
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group children in programs for "phy
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ITEM VI. 11ttachment 11 SUGGESTED R
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- ITEM IX.A. Attachment B SUGGESTED
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Slep 4: Slep 5: 304 The results of
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AppendixB OCR DATA ON STUDENT SUSPE
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2 1 1 1 1 Linwood 364 19 345 (1) (1
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173 (1,187) 3 15,783 7,039 5,554 3,
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Florence #1 14,221 8,266 5,950 3 2
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16Because no suspension days were r
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State School District Appendix S NU
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Secondary Students Suspended At Lea
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AppendixT SUSPENSIONS IN CDF SURVEY
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11 ppen.di;-c T SUSPENSIONS IN CDF
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AppendlxT SUSPENSIONS IN CDF SURVEY
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Appendi.T T SUSPENSIONS IN CDF SURV
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APPENDIX U FOOTNOTES 1The Superinte
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Connecticut I Policy set by None "C
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A ppendix V STATUTORY PROVISIONS FO
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B. Children of Limited English-Spea
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must be a uniform measure by which