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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
truancy
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
condoned
▪ Is there any allowance made for long-term illness? or for condoned truancy?
▪ If the school's overall attendance rate is poor, then the school may well suspect a high level of condoned truancy.
▪ These measures were seen as indirectly reducing condoned truancy.
▪ This authorisation could, of course, be spurious and be disguising condoned truancy.
▪ Not all authorised absence is condoned truancy, of course, especially in November when illness may be passed around the school.
■ NOUN
rate
▪ And in Naples, 25 percent of school-age children are not enrolled and truancy rates of the rest are high.
▪ And which politicians have the highest truancy rate?
▪ We will publish test results, exam results and truancy rates and ensure that there is regular independent inspection.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Chief Constable of Essex John Burrow added his voice yesterday when he warned that there was a connection between truancy and crime.
▪ Earnhardt would have understood the mass truancy.
▪ Fifteen miles away in Witney Henry Box School reported just three percent truancy.
▪ Legal intervention in truancy cases has focused on the notion of parental responsibility.
▪ Tackling truancy Schools reported using a range of strategies to tackle absence from school.
▪ There is a tendency amongst teachers and EWOs to blame parents for most instances of truancy.
▪ These measures were seen as indirectly reducing condoned truancy.
▪ They want a truancy hearing, which it says is the final notice.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Truancy

Truancy \Tru"an*cy\, n. The act of playing truant, or the state of being truant; as, addicted to truancy.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
truancy

1754, from truant + -cy.

Wiktionary
truancy

n. The act of shirking from responsibilities and duties – refers especially to school absentees.

WordNet
truancy

n. failure to attend (especially school) [syn: hooky]

Wikipedia
Truancy

Truancy is any intentional unauthorized or illegal absence from compulsory education. It is absences caused by students of their own free will, and usually does not refer to legitimate "excused" absences, such as ones related to medical conditions. Truancy is usually explicitly defined in the school's handbook of policies and procedures. Some children whose parents claim to homeschool have also been found truant in the United States. Another term for truancy is playing hooky. Attending school, but not going to class is skipping class/lesson.

In some schools, truancy may result in not being able to graduate or to receive credit for class attended, until the time lost to truancy is made up through a combination of detention, fines, or summer school.

Truancy is a frequent subject of popular culture; Ferris Bueller's Day Off is about the title character's (played by Matthew Broderick) day of truancy in Chicago with his girlfriend and best friend. Truancy is also the title of a 2008 novel about a student uprising against a dictatorial educational system.

Truancy (novel)

Truancy is a dystopian novel written by Isamu Fukui, a New York City student in Stuyvesant High School, when he was 15 years old. Set in a totalitarian city ruled by its Mayor and Educators, it follows the story of a fifteen-year-old student named Tack, and a student rebellion calling itself the Truancy. The story takes a critical look at the institution of school, and is dedicated "to everyone that has ever suffered in the name of education".

Usage examples of "truancy".

That she, of all on earth, should be encouraging Crossjay to truancy was incredible.

De Craye and Willoughby on the subject of his latest truancy, each gentleman trying to run him down in a palpable fib.

That truancy was to a great extent responsible for these juvenile delinquents was proved by the fact that more then one-half of the lads sent to Magill had committed the crimes for which they were first convicted while truanting.

Our truancy is defined by one fixed our drift represents merely a slight change of angle to it: we may seize the moment, toss it around while I pass, a short dash here, an exploration there, but we are brought round full circle to face again the single fact-that we, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern bearing a letter from one king to another, are taking Hamlet.

My mother confessed her truancy and affirmed that she would not go back to school.

The punishment for complete truancy was little worse than for being late.

Luckily for him, his father was absent at a Vigilance Committee called to take cognizance of the late sluice robberies, and although this temporarily concealed his offense of truancy, the news of the vigilance meeting determined him to keep his lips sealed.

In other words, the human nature of the man was dragged to the school of its truancy by circumstances, for him to learn the commonest of sums done on a slate, in regard to payment of debts and the unrelaxing grip of the creditor on the defaulter.

Muckle exhorted the newly arrived lawmen to arrest the protesters for trespassing, truancy, and disturbing the peace.

Also, there is no longer any pretence of attending school these daysand nobody is mentioning my truancy, so I guess Jasmine told the family to be hush.

Her truancies and vagrancies concerned them not: she was a law to herself, like the birds and squirrels.

Truancy could lead to juvenile delinquency, as was well known by every mother worth her Parents magazine subscription.