Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Worcester

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Girls Miss More School Than Boys, Reversing a Pre-COVID Pattern

In Dover-Sherborn, girls were chronically absent at a rate of 6.8% in 2024-25. Boys: 3.8%. The gap, 3.0 percentage points, is more than four times the statewide female-higher gap. And it is not new. G...

Lawrence Erased Its COVID Attendance Crisis. No Other Large Gateway City Can Say That.

Once a month in Lawrence, more than a dozen social service agencies crowd around a table to discuss every homeless and newly arrived immigrant student in the district. Housing. Healthcare. Transportat...

Gateway City Students Miss School at Triple the Rate of Suburban Peers

In Dover-Sherborn, a wealthy suburban district 20 miles southwest of Boston, 5.3% of students are chronically absent. In Boston itself, 33.0% are. Six times the rate. Same state, same funding formula,...

42 Massachusetts Districts Beat Chronic Absenteeism Back to Pre-COVID. Voc-Tech Schools Led the Way.

In Clinton, a small district west of Worcester, 8.7% of students are chronically absent. Before the pandemic, it was 16.1%. The district didn't just recover from COVID's attendance shock. It halved it...

Only 86 Kindergartners for Every 100 Seniors

In 1996, Massachusetts had 152 kindergartners for every 100 seniors. In 2025-26, it has 87.

After Three Decades of Growth, LEP Enrollment Falls by 6,889 in a Single Year

For 30 years, the trajectory pointed in one direction. Massachusetts public schools enrolled 43,690 students classified as limited English proficient in 1994. By 2025, that number had nearly tripled t...

Black Enrollment Hits All-Time High as Diaspora Reshapes Gateway Cities

Massachusetts public schools enrolled 93,651 Black students in 2025-26, the highest number in the 33 years the state has tracked enrollment by race. The record came in a year when total enrollment fel...

Boston Hits All-Time Low, Down 30% in Three Decades

In 2025, Boston Public Schools gained 352 students. It was the district's first year of growth since 2015, a small green bar in a decade of red. Superintendent Mary Skipper had reason to believe the w...