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    The Week

    Paying kids to come to class: One school's 'last-ditch' plan

    A Cincinnati high school is giving seniors $25 a week to simply show up on time and stay out of trouble. Will that really work?

    Dohn Community High School, a charter school in Cincinnati, Ohio, is throwing money at its sizable truancy problem. Starting this week, seniors who have perfect attendance, show up on time, participate in class, and stay out of trouble will be rewarded each week with a $25 Visa gift card; underclassmen will get $10 for each perfect week, and every time a student earns a card, they'll also get $5 deposited in an account payable upon graduation. Here, a look at Dohn's controversial, "last-ditch" effort to keep kids in school:

    Why is Dohn paying kids to attend class?
    The high school serves students at high risk of dropping out — with 170 mostly low-income, minority students, Dohn has an attendance rate of 84 percent, and only 14 percent of students graduated last year. "People will say you're rewarding kids for something they should already be doing anyway," Dohn Principal Ramone Davenport tells The Cincinnati Enquirer. "But they're not doing it. We've tried everything else." Earlier incentives included pizza and uniform-free days, but frequently absent students kept requesting cash, Davenport tells CBS Local 12 News. "I thought about it and I said lets go out to find the resources to do that."

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    Who's paying for this?
    Private donations and federal Workforce Investment Act dollars managed by Easter Seals are financing the $40,000-a-year program. If the rewards system is successful, Easter Seals says it already has a grant to extend the program through next year.

    Has this been tried before?
    Yes. Individual schools and even whole school districts have tried similar rewards-based programs for years. The incentives vary. Some Albuquerque and Fort Worth students get a shot at a new car; kids at a Lowell, Mass., high schools earn a $1,200 laptop for good attendance, or for getting into college or the military; and various schools around the country offer cash for attendance or good grades. Britain has paid some lower-income students monthly stipends for attendance and performance for more than a decade.

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    Does it work?
    Sometimes. Harvard economist Roland Fryer Jr., who's conducted incentives programs at several large, urban school districts since 2007, says the programs tend to be successful if they reward behaviors like attendance, but not good grades. In a 2005 look at several programs, ABC's Good Morning America found that some programs — like the Lowell laptop giveaway — did really well, while others had more modest results. 

    So... is paying students to attend school a good idea?
    If the programs are well-designed, yes, says Hedy Chang at the Attendance Works initiative. "Research and common sense tell us that school attendance is critically important to student achievement," and paying students "just to show up" can be part of the solution. Are you kidding? says Peter Spevak at the Center for Applied Motivation. Rewarding students for something they're "supposed to do anyway" actually "undermines internal motivation," which is bad for the student and bad for society. Look, I'd love kids to attend class "for the intrinsic value," says Harlem Children's Zone founder Geoffrey Canada, whose Promise Academy high schools pay students up to $120 a month for showing up and doing well. "And until then, I'd love them to do it for money. I just want them to do it."

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    Sources: AP, Cincinnati Enquirer, CBS News, Great Schools, Learning Matters, Patch, TIME, Yahoo News

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    24 comments

    • David  •  3 mths ago
      As long as hunger and homelessness are not visible alternatives to acquiring a minimal education, dropping out appears not so risky and much easier than serious learning.
      • Topkick 3 mths ago
        And your solution, to a problem we are all aware of, is WHAT?
    • MatthewS  •  3 mths ago
      You shouldn't pay people for just showing up.

      These kids aren't earning any money. We have completely disconnected money from earning these days. Just because you do work doesn't mean you earn money. When I mow my lawn, I'm doing work but no one pays me for it. I do it because it benefits me. School is the same thing. The student benefits from being in school. You shouldn't get paid for something that benefits only you.

      And btw, when I talk about disconnecting money from earing, I'm not (just) talking about unions. I'm talking about CEOs who get bonuses well and above the effort they put in and about investors who make money not for doing work, but for having money.
      • Topkick 3 mths ago
        Tell kids who have nothing, no money, no family concern, no role models, why they should care. They don't think anyone cares about them. And see no way out!
        Try a new idea, even if you don't think it will work. Many educators think it will!
      • MatthewS 3 mths ago
        Well, first we need to stop paying sports stars and actors and rappers millions of dollars. This is far out of proportion with thier contribution to society.

        Then we need to spend the money to fix our schools, giving at least close to up to date equipment, and paying to hire good teachers.

        Then we have to show that pretty much everybody these days who is making even decent money needed AT LEAST needed a high school education, and usually more.
    • x  •  3 mths ago
      Money can fill empty seats but it cannot make students want to learn.
      This is the first step to a lifetime of handouts.
      • Topkick 3 mths ago
        And not wanting to do anything, makes you part of the problem!
      • x 3 mths ago
        You have no idea what I do everyday sir. Thank you for service, but keep your opinions where they belong, in the #$%$
    • S  •  3 mths ago
      Kids aren't engaged, parents aren't engaged. All the money in the world won't make them learn.
      • Topkick 3 mths ago
        Many kids think everyone has given up on them. So they give up on themselves. Look at the rise in young suicides. I think there is a correlation. It can be changed. But not if everyone gives up. Let me put my stripes on for a second:Your attitude SUCKS! MAN UP!
      • x 3 mths ago
        You are in the minority here sir. All your thumbs down don't lie.God bless your wife, maybe she should comment instead of you. You are talking out of your #$%$
    • Mildred  •  Indianapolis, Indiana  •  3 mths ago
      My question is... where the h*&% are the parents that they can't see that their kid is not in school? I know that parents have to work, but if they know their kid is skipping school,let them lower the boom on that kid. If you pay them to go to school, then they will expect to be payed to get off their butts to do anything. Bad,Bad idea.
      • Topkick 3 mths ago
        Most parents in failing schools don't give a rat's rear where their kids are or what they are doing. Teachers have NO means of changing that. And no means of punishing students. The non-stick doesn't work. Try the carrot!
    • RICK  •  Dayton, Ohio  •  3 mths ago
      tax payers like that huh
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  3 mths ago
      I taught court ordered teens for many years in our low income/high(75%) welfare school district. If attendance is the only thing required, they will put their heads down and drool on your desks. There has to be an academic component, even a low one--like maintaining at least a 1.0 GPA or they will just show up and suck up oxygen.
    • x  •  3 mths ago
      I have seen this fail with my own eyes.
      It will have a small impact at first.
      Then attendance will go back to the norm.
      Nothing can motivate the lazy and weak.
      Time to let natural selection take it's course.
    • MatthewS  •  3 mths ago
      What annoys me the most is what about those kids who go to other schools, who show up every day and work hard? Do they get paid, too? Or is just the ones who threaten to drop out? Isn't that incentivizing bad behavior?
    • MatthewS  •  3 mths ago
      Change the law so that in order to receive any government assistance, you must either have a high school degree or be enrolled in a program to get your degree.
    • Bearman  •  Cicero, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      And after paying to get the truant and trouble making students out of their hair and they give them graduation, then what??? NO MORE FREE STUFF, it's never FREE!!!!!!
    • JEFFREY  •  Southfield, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      @#?|\ stupid
    • David  •  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      So if the kids are only showing up for attendance and not for learning...
      Are the teachers only showing up for a check and not for teaching?
      Are the administrators only showing up for pay and not for work?

      Lets just pay them all to stay home so we can build and maintain schools where kids have an interest in them.
      It would be cheaper in the long run.
    • Haruka  •  3 mths ago
      What a wonderful lesson. Don't show up because you have a desire to end a cycle of poverty and do better for yourself in the future. Show up because the school bribes you. If you're going to bribe them, make it $50 and they have to maintain a 2.81 GPA or better and have 85% attendance for the year.
    • s'up cuz  •  3 mths ago
      and people don't understand why there is income disparity....sigh, these kids will never make any real money
    • Nothing in lifes for free  •  3 mths ago
      crazy we hve to buy are kids now days the reservations give their kids money for going to school and getting good grades this even goes as far as college they have it sooo dam good along with all the other free stuff the nativesamericans get from the goverment free free free is the reservations way of lifejust this past year they got truck loads of gifts to give to the kids, new bikes for their kids,free funiture, and then they get payments at christmas and spend that at the casino or the bar or on drugs the goverment needs to quit catoring to them and give it to other poor people instead that dont get money from a tribe, this all brings along embezzeling on the reservation just look at the vehicles they drive along with the high wages for a job with no education needed hell the council with no education get around 70,000 yrly not counting other perks 800 for a hr meeting ,travel and alot more
    • Shelby  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      Paying students to stay in school is the most rediculous scheme on the face of the planet! No wonder we have, as a general rule of thumb, the most uneducated, laziest, uninspired population of any country in the world! What a total waste of humanity...completely explains why pollution and corruption reign supreme...disgraceful that Americans value themselves, their country and the planet so little. Shameful situation in what should be the greatest country!
    • Flatusm  •  Seattle, Washington  •  3 mths ago
      Here's another: Do like Japan used to do. Have one test, one, at about age fourteen. Pass it an you get free school until age 18 or 20 if you are poor. Fail it, and you will get courses in trades and low-end manufacturing, service or whatever until they can establish an apprenticehip or long term job. Everyone getting educational assistance past age 18 spends summers in community service.
    • Flatusm  •  Seattle, Washington  •  3 mths ago
      Here's an idea: No welfare for unwed teen mothers unless they work. They can do phone work until the kid is big enough for day care, then they can assist at a school or daycare or clean the courthouse toilets for all I care.
    • Flatusm  •  Seattle, Washington  •  3 mths ago
      NOW they figure out how to attract black people to get an education.