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Bill > A3385


NJ A3385

NJ A3385
Clarifies public school student attendance recording and reporting requirements.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill clarifies public school student attendance recording and reporting requirements for State and federal accountability purposes. Under the State Board of Education's regulations, students are required to be recorded as present, absent, or excused for a State-excused absence. The six State-excused absences include: 1) a student's religious observance; 2) participation in observance of Veterans Day; 3) participation in district board of election membership activities; 4) participation in "Take Our Children to Work Day"; 5) a certain number of college visits for students in grades 11 and 12; and 6) a closure of a busing school district that prevents a student from having transportation to a receiving school. Under current law, absences based on a student's physical and mental health are not recognized as excused absences. Pursuant to New Jersey's federally approved Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) State Plan, the Department of Education is required to report on chronic absenteeism as an indicator of school quality. Under the ESSA State Plan and current regulations, State-excused absences do not count toward the 10 percent of days missed before a student is considered "chronically absent." This bill clarifies that students are to be recorded on the student's attendance record as present, absent for an excused absence, absent for a State-excused absence, or absent for an unexcused absence. Under the bill, a student is to be recorded as absent for an excused absence for: (1) the physical health of the student, including the experiencing of symptoms of a menstrual disorder; (2) the mental or behavioral health of the student; (3) the student's required attendance in court; or (4) a death in the family. Under the bill, an excused absence, like a State-excused absence, cannot be used to exclude a student from any awards or recognition on the basis of attendance. As an excused absence, students are required to be given the opportunity to make up any school work that was missed during the absence. In order to have the absence recognized as an excused absence, the student is required to submit medical documentation, non-medical documentation, or documentation from a parent or guardian of the student to prove the student meets the requirements for an excused absence. Medical documentation is to excuse a student for up to five school days. If the student's absence is the result of the mental or behavioral health of the student, appropriate school support personnel are to meet with the student, review the documentation submitted, and make a determination on whether the absence qualifies as an excused absence. This bill requires the Commissioner of Education to develop guidance concerning the reporting of student absences and calculating chronic absenteeism. Additionally, this bill requires the school district to report student attendance pursuant to the categories established by the act for School Report Cards. The bill clarifies that for purposes of chronic absenteeism reporting, excused absences, as established in this bill, are to be considered absences and counted towards a student's absentee rate. State-excused absences are not to count for purposes of calculating a student's absentee rate. Finally, the bill clarifies that unexcused absences are considered in determining whether a student is truant.

AI Summary

This bill clarifies how public schools in New Jersey record and report student attendance, impacting state and federal accountability measures, particularly concerning chronic absenteeism, which is defined by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) as missing 10% or more of school days. The bill establishes four categories for student attendance: present, excused absence, State-excused absence, and unexcused absence. Excused absences are expanded to include reasons like physical or mental health issues (including menstrual disorders), court appearances, and deaths in the family, and students will have the opportunity to make up missed schoolwork and will not be penalized for these absences in attendance awards; however, documentation is required, with medical absences limited to five days and mental health absences requiring a meeting with school support personnel. State-excused absences, which include religious observances, Veterans Day participation, election activities, "Take Our Children to Work Day," college visits for juniors and seniors, and transportation issues due to busing district closures, will not count towards chronic absenteeism calculations, similar to current law. Crucially, for the purpose of calculating chronic absenteeism, excused absences will now be counted as absences, while State-excused absences will not. The bill also mandates that the Commissioner of Education provide guidance on reporting these absences and that school districts report attendance data according to these new categories on School Report Cards, and it clarifies that unexcused absences are used to determine truancy.

Committee Categories

Education

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Education Committee (on 01/13/2026)

Taxonomy

Education
  • ‐ Elementary and Secondary Education

bill text


bill summary

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bill summary

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bill summary

Document Type Source Location Created
State Bill Page https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/bill-search/2026/A3385 01/28/2026
BillText https://pub.njleg.gov/Bills/2026/A3500/3385_I1.HTM 01/28/2026
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