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Prison data, court files show link between school truancy and crime

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"They think about what's going to happen today, and 'if there's a chance I'm going to get beat up (at school) today, I ain't going,'" Olson said. "'And if the school threatens me with detention if I'm absent, then I'm not going tomorrow either, because I don't want to serve detention.'

"With the 14-year-old selling heroin, I don't know if the system has the capacity or the resources to do enough. They're already so far down a road of criminal behavior that it may be difficult to correct it," Olson added. "You read some of those cases, and you're like, my God, even when they were 3 years old they didn't have a shot."

Illinois has just over 800 students in its eight state youth prisons. The average young inmate enters scoring between the fifth- and sixth-grade level in reading, and Gaffey said school records and the teens' own stories suggest that elementary-grade truancy is increasing across the state amid rising rates of child poverty and homelessness.

"But even if the youth reads at the third-grade level, that doesn't mean they're cognitively at that level," Gaffey added. Many have talent, tenacity and broad life experiences, and typically they can communicate verbally "within the high school level."

The Tribune also analyzed math and reading scores for the 42 adult inmates enrolled in the Big Muddy River state prison's literacy program and found the average inmate started at the sixth-grade level, with seven of them testing at third grade or below.

"If I had connected to school, my life would have gone different in thousands of ways," said 41-year-old Big Muddy inmate Robert Sloan, interviewed in September as part of the Tribune's truancy investigation.

Sloan, who has spent much of his adult life incarcerated for methamphetamine dealing and sexual assault convictions, is now struggling to improve on his fourth-grade math and reading scores.

"You feel like a fool when you don't know how to fill out (a job) application. You say, 'I don't want this stinking job.' But you are thinking, 'I wish I was smart enough to read the application,'" Sloan said.

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