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Saving Alex

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(MCT) — LASALLE, Ill. — The 12-year-old stood mute and motionless in his family's kitchen. It was noon on a Wednesday in late August, and once again Alejandro Frausto was not in school.

"Would you like to sit down, Alex?" asked Martha Small, a LaSalle County truancy caseworker making her first visit to the home.

Alex didn't budge. He stood with head down and arms hanging loosely by his sides, a boyish sentry in baggy red gym shorts and a black T-shirt.

Alex had already missed eight days of the new seventh-grade school year. He was absent for more than two months the previous year.

Other kids teased him about his chubbiness and the mop of unruly hair that dangles over his eyes, according to his mother. Alex denies being teased but said he fought back when provoked by classmates. School administrators accused him of erupting in bouts of anger, once even pushing a teacher. Now Alex won't go to school at all.

In a gentle but firm voice, Small reminded Alex that he must attend school. He began tapping his right thigh with his hand. His face reddened.

Small said quietly, "Don't panic, Alex."

As Small turned to speak with Alex's mother, Carmen Frausto, the boy whispered to a reporter about the anxiety he feels in class.

"I can't stand it in there. It's like four walls closing in," he said.

At age 12, Alex stands at a crossroads. When boys vanish from school in the elementary grades, grim fates often await: juvenile detention homes, state prisons. It happened to one of his older brothers.

But in this predominantly rural county, where the child poverty rate nearly doubled from 2008 to 2009, authorities are pouring resources into saving Alex and other kids like him.

"Nobody is giving up on a 12-year-old," said Small, a 53-year-old woman with steady brown eyes.

Truancy officers no longer exist in Chicago, even though thousands of children in grades K-8 miss months of class each year or drop off the enrollment lists altogether. But spending time alongside Small and other "outreach workers," as they're now often called, shows the vital role these front-line child advocates can play in bringing detached youths back to school.

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