Recently, the Frontline Research & Learning Institute analyzed over five years of absence data from over 7,000 school districts nationwide to uncover trends with the goal of making future absences more predictable. In this blog post, we’ll dive into this up-to-date data and how the insights and takeaways can help your district understand the depth of your substitute pool.
The Research
- 5+ years of absence data
- > 7,000 school districts
The Key Takeaways
- Mondays and Fridays tend to have more absences than Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays in almost every week of the school year.
- Absence totals tend to rise through the fall dip in the early spring and peak in the late spring.
Human Capital Analytics and Machine Learning
Frontline’s Human Capital Analytics team decided to take this analysis a step further by applying machine learning models to daily absence data to see if they could uncover more trends, with the goal of predicting future daily absence totals.
The team figured that if district and school administrators could anticipate which days in the future were to require more substitutes than others, they could have the foresight to allocate their human capital resources most effectively to ensure high absence fill rates.
This foresight may also help:
- Substitute teacher hiring
- Placement of current substitutes
- Implications for PD planning to minimize the effects of related absences.
Absence Prediction
After testing a few different machine learning models, it turns out that the district level, daily absence totals are actually pretty predictable!
Below is a chart showing daily absence totals from the 22-23 school year in light blue, versus the predicted totals generated by Human Capital Analytics’ machine learning model in dark blue. You can see that the machine learning model accurately predicted peaks and valleys and that the two lines generally overlap with a few exceptions.
The average district in the testing sample had an average daily absence total of 63 absences and the model predicted daily totals, within plus or minus three absences, 91% of the time.
Looking Into the Future
The good news? You don’t need to wave a wand or click your heels in shiny red slippers to predict absence trends in your district. With Human Capital Analytics, you can access machine learning predictions for the entire 23-24 school year. This tool will empower district leaders to analyze which days they can reasonably expect more or less sub-required absences and see how their absence trends rise and fall throughout the year.
Look Into Your District’s Future with Human Capital Analytics
Recommended Resources:
- Faster Payroll with Fewer Errors: How Mid-Prairie Community School District cut the time required for monthly payroll in half.
- How to Support Compliance with The Complete View of Employee Absence and Time: The sheer volume of data generated by time tracking and leave management processes can overburden even the most dedicated human resources officers.
- The Big Picture of Teacher Absenteeism: What can you do to manage teacher absences? Get our free white paper to become an absenteeism expert.
- Roll Call: Best Practices for Ensuring Substitute Coverage: Consistency and continuity are key to ensuring that students receive the best possible learning experience. Yet, teacher absences are an inevitable reality. Whether it’s due to illness, professional development, or personal reasons, teacher absences can impact student learning.