Nearly half the student population at Harrisburg High School slapped with suspension notices

Harrisburg High fire truck front.JPG

Harrisburg firefighters checked out the city's main high school March 29 after a fire alarm sounded.

HARRISBURG--Nearly half the student population at Harrisburg High School was slapped with suspension notices this week because the students had racked up too many unexcused absences.

School officials handed out suspension notices to 500 students on Monday as part of a crackdown by the school's new principal. About 1,100 students are enrolled at the school.

At least 100 of the students served one-day suspensions on Tuesday as punishment. The disciplinary fates of the other students remain unknown as school officials continue to work with parents to confirm whether some of the absences were excused. School officials said many parents were able to provide documentation to clear up their students' records.

School officials met with parents en masse after school Wednesday to explain the new expectations at the school, which has long struggled with poor test scores and a low graduation rate.

Just prior to the parent meeting, school officials met with reporters to discuss their new tack against tardiness and truancy to improve the atmosphere at the school.

During the informal news conference, a fire alarm sounded, disrupting the event and sending reporters, students and staff outside for about 10 minutes while the fire department cleared the building.

Afterward, school officials said it was not a planned drill, but they could not say for certain what caused the alarm. They planned to review footage from the school's surveillance system. It could have been a prank or mechanical malfunction, they said.

The school's tough stance against tardiness and unexcused absences was launched by the principal, Lisa Love, who said she could not improve academic achievement there if students don't show up.

"The problem I've noticed here as principal is that students are coming to school but they are not going to classes when they get here," said Love, who began leading the school at the end of January. "Many parents send their kids to school and they're thinking they're going to class. I needed to reach out because of the enormous number not going to class."

Instead of reporting to class, students congregate in hallways, restrooms, gymnasiums and other nooks and corners of the expansive school building, Love said.

Love said she needed to do something "radical" to get the attention of students, parents and the community.

"If you're not in class, all you're here to do then is to wreak havoc upon the school and disrupt the work that we are trying to do here," she said. "And that's to focus on student achievement."

But at least one parent questioned the wisdom of preventing students from attending class as punishment for missing class.

"What does that teach them?" said Shanelle Franklin, whose daughter was threatened with suspension. "They've got senior projects to do."

Assistant Principal Keith Edmonds said they drew the line for excessive absences for students who missed at least 35 classes in the last marking period without providing proper documentation. Each marking period covers 45 days, or nine weeks. The number of missed-classes that triggered the suspension notice amounts to a week's worth of unexcused absences, since students have seven classes each day.

The list contained 540 names, Edmonds said. Special education students were dealt with separately, but school officials then began notifying parents of the roughly 500 remaining students that they would be serving a one-day suspension.

Word quickly spread, Edmonds said, and many parents hurried to the school to provide proper documentation for absences, avoiding the suspension penalty.

Going forward, students who continue to rack up unexcused absences may miss prom or graduation ceremonies, Edmonds said. Students with more than 15 unexcused absences can't go to prom. Parents who are concerned about their child's status should contact the high school before purchasing expensive items for the event, Love said.

Although the suspensions could be construed as "negative," Love said she hoped to translated the situation into a positive by using the opportunity to connect with parents. She and other school officials also plan to meet parents by hosting meetings at Hall Manor and in other neighborhoods next month.

"This was a hard decision for me to make," Love said of the suspensions, "but I had to get the attention of the community to let them know that we are here. And we're about to do some wonderful things for students and the community and we want this to be a school that everyone is proud of. And this was probably the eye opener we needed to make that happen."

Superintendent Sybil Knight-Burney said the mass suspensions represented a "wake-up call," to the community.

"In order for us to get different results, we have to do something different," she said. "We can't do the same ol' same ol' and then complain about it when we're getting the same ol' results."

Last year's Keystone test scores showed 7.3 percent of Harrisburg High School students performed as proficient in biology; 11.7 percent in algebra and 28.8 in literature. The state averages for those subjects, meanwhile, were 64.5 percent, 59 percent and 72.89 percent.

The school's graduation rate increased to 52.78 percent in 2015, but still fell short of the statewide average of 84.75.

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