Schools
Attending Class In Hoboken: How Many Days Can A Student Miss?
Hoboken's public and private schools had more than 10 percent of students qualify as "chronically absent" in 2013-14, a report says.

We all need to take a day off now and then… students included.
But according to a recent report, around 10 percent of the students in New Jersey had “high chronic absentee rates” during the 2013-14 school year, meaning that they missed more than 18 days of school.
The report – done by the Advocates for Children of New Jersey – cited Hoboken’s public and charter schools among the districts in need of improvement.
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- See related article: Hoboken’s Schools Have High Absentee Rates
HOBOKEN’S ATTENDANCE RULES
In Hoboken’s public schools, a student must attend at least 163 days of school to pass to the next grade, but a “waiver of these attendance requirements may be granted for good cause by the school principal.”
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STATE LAW
According to the NJ Department of Education, student absenteeism can lead to “low academic achievement, school dropout, delinquency and gang involvement.”
“School districts that have established multi-systemic approaches and policies pertaining to student absenteeism typically experience fewer numbers of dropouts and a greater number of graduates,” the NJDOE states on its website.
The New Jersey compulsory education law requires all children between the ages of 6 to 16 to attend school.
State attendance regulations require each district board of education to develop, adopt and implement policies and procedures regarding the attendance of students, including the adoption of a definition of “unexcused absence,” the provision of mandated services for students with between one and nine cumulative unexcused absences, and a mandated court referral for “truant students,” those with ten or more unexcused absences.
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