Wednesday, March 20, 2019
Commuting difficulty plays a part in school absence
Transportation is one of many potential obstacles that students might face as they attempt to attend school, but there are few opportunities to identify the unique contribution of transportation to school attendance.
This study applies models of commuting stress developed for adult commuters to students in an open enrollment school district to examine whether commuting difficulty plays a part in school absence. By comparing residentially stable students with themselves as they transition from eighth to ninth grade, the study identifies how changes in estimated school transportation are related to changes in attendance.
The authors find that all students miss more days in high school than they did in middle school and that changing transit demands are associated with an increase in absences.
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