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Small town succeeds where Chicago fails

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"When parents hear they could be prosecuted for their kids missing school, they take school attendance more seriously. My program is just one additional tool in the toolbox," said Long Beach prosecutor Douglas Haubert.

Several national experts on crime and education told the Tribune that they knew of no authoritative studies analyzing whether taking parents to court and other tough measures to fight truancy in elementary school are effective.

"I lament the shortage of peer-reviewed research studies not only on official sanctions for truancy but on legal sanctions as applied to school conduct in general," said Rutgers University sociologist Paul Hirschfield.

There is a lot of impassioned advocacy on the topic, most of it arguing against punishing kids and their parents for truancy, said Arizona State University criminologist Gary Sweeten.

What's lacking are hard data and research, he said. "There's a vacuum there."

In Galesburg and other communities, the job of outreach workers is not just to retrieve truants and hold parents accountable, but to intervene before the pattern takes hold.

While Zimmerman was bringing the fourth-grade boy to Steele, first-grader Brandon Medina was three miles away at Silas Willard, sitting at a pint-size desk in the hallway with his face buried in his folded arms.

The school's outreach worker, Denise Miller, was using an empty classroom to meet with Brandon's distraught grandmother, his homeroom teacher and a school counselor.

For the first two weeks of school, Brandon had sobbed relentlessly when the big yellow bus arrived, and he resisted getting on, his grandmother Melissa Delgado told the group.

A former teacher, Miller already knew Brandon's chaotic back story: The 6-year-old's mother had left the family, had a new baby and had recently stopped visiting Brandon altogether. His dad wasn't in the picture. His grandmother had taken custody three years before, and she was overwhelmed by Brandon's noisy refusal to get on the school bus.

"I don't know what to do. I don't know what else to do," Delgado told Miller and the others.

Miller probed for whether Brandon had specific complaints about school. He said that the classroom was loud and that he had trouble making friends, Delgado said, and he claimed that his tummy hurt.

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