Tens of thousands of students across the country began last week by staying out of school to join a nationwide boycott, organized mostly by Latinos, to oppose federal proposals that would crack down on illegal immigration.
Public school districts in Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, San Diego, and San Francisco reported higher student-absentee rates than usual on May 1, the day of the boycott. Some of the same districts also reported that teachers and staff members generally came to work as usual.
Particularly in California, students in heavily Hispanic districts took part in the national effort, which many immigrant leaders promoted as a way to dramatize immigrants鈥 contributions to U.S. society through their mass absence from work or school and by not patronizing stores or other businesses for a single day. Many boycotters joined in marches and rallies instead.
Susan Cox, a spokeswoman for the 727,000-student Los Angeles Unified School District, said 72,000 students in grades 6-12, or 27 percent of the students in those grades, were absent May 1.
More than 73 percent of the district鈥檚 K-12 students are Latino.
According to news reports, about 300,000 people in Los Angeles took to the streets that day to protest a measure approved by the U.S. House of Representatives in December that would make it a felony to be an undocumented immigrant.
The U.S. Senate, which failed on April 7 to reach agreement on an alternative measure, is expected to consider the issue again before it takes a break for Memorial Day.
Ms. Cox said that on about three previous days this spring, the school system had higher-than-usual absentee rates because students participated in immigrant-rights rallies. (鈥69传媒 Sound Off on Immigration,鈥 April 5, 2006)
Financial Losses
In California, schools receive most of their money from the state based on an average of student attendance reported on three different days each school year. But some pots of state aid are tied to actual daily attendance. Ms. Cox noted that state Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O鈥機onnell has said schools won鈥檛 be able to recover the costs from a high number of absences related to immigration rallies. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have numbers [yet] as far as what the loss is economically,鈥 Ms. Cox added.
Nearly 20 percent of students in the San Diego school district were absent on May 1, said Dick Van Der Laan, the communications director for the district. Normally, about 5 percent of students would be absent, he said. About 42 percent of the district鈥檚 132,500 students are Latino.
Mr. Van Der Laan said he鈥檚 not sure what the 26,400 students who were absent that Monday did during the day, because San Diego didn鈥檛 have an immigration rally scheduled during school hours. Instead, an immigrant-rights candlelight vigil was held in a San Diego park from 5:30 to 8 that evening, he noted.
In Chicago, some schools in predominantly Latino neighborhoods reported very high absentee rates. Only 17 percent of the 1,690 students attending Benito Juarez High School and 15 percent of the 2,429 students attending David Glasgow Farragut Career Academy, both in Mexican-American neighborhoods, were in school the day of the boycott, said Michael P. Vaughn, a spokesman for the 424,000-student Chicago school system.
News reports said more than 300,000 demonstrators took part in a pro-immigrant march in Chicago.
Unexcused Absences?
Most district officials interviewed last week said students were warned they would receive an unexcused absence for missing school to join the boycott. But the officials also said they recognized that schools were not necessarily adhering to that policy.
鈥淭he idea districtwide was that it was an unexcused absence and the work couldn鈥檛 be made up,鈥 said Mark Stevens, a spokesman for the 72,000-student Denver public schools. 鈥淏ut some schools were taking a more friendly approach that this was a rare national day in which families were out together in the streets. I don鈥檛 think schools were in a position to draw a line in the sand.鈥
Linda Torres, the principal of Horace Mann Middle School in Denver, said that at her school, if a child had parental permission to participate in an immigration rally on May 1, the absence was considered excused. 鈥淣ormally that wouldn鈥檛 be one of the official excused absences, but we want to support our families who want to participate,鈥 she said.
In fact, 75 percent of the school鈥檚 412 students鈥95 percent of whom are Latino鈥攚ere absent that day.
鈥淲e carried on as normal,鈥 Ms. Torres said. 鈥淲e are committed to providing a rigorous curriculum every day of the week, and if they aren鈥檛 here, they miss out.鈥
At Annandale High School, in Annandale, Va., not far from the nation鈥檚 capital, Jennifer Sharp, an administrative assistant in the attendance office, said that 362 of the school鈥檚 2,319 students, or a little over 15 percent, were absent. Of those out, 249 were Hispanic.
鈥淢ost of the parents said they were sick,鈥 she said of the absentees. 鈥淎bout five parents said they participated in the boycott. I put it in [the computer] as 鈥榚xcused.鈥 We look at it as an educational event.鈥