BATON ROUGE, LA – In an unprecedented move to rebrand Baton Rouge’s lagging attendance numbers, one school leader has proposed redefining truancy as “nontraditional attendance,” a term officials say better reflects the district’s “innovative approach to education.”
According to the plan, students who skip weeks of class will no longer be labeled truant but rather “engaged in alternative pathways.” Missing the bus? That’s “transportation-based learning.” Cutting class to hang out at the mall? Now considered a “commerce internship.” Even chronic absences will be reframed as “long-term independent study.”
Critics argue this is nothing more than creative accounting to boost graduation rates, but supporters insist it’s a necessary evolution. “Attendance is about mindset, not geography,” one administrator explained. “If a student feels connected to school in their heart, then they were present.”
With the new definitions in place, district leaders expect to proudly report a 100% attendance rate by year’s end, even if no one actually shows up.
