Today's school refusal is a problematic dilemma. According to "fight against runaway", "escape is the entrance to crime, the high nodding rate is related to the robbery rate during Japan and destructive behavior" (US Department of Education, 1996). School refusal itself is merely a current crime, but it is a core link related to many other problems. These relationships include behavioral problems (Gresham, Lane and Lambros, 2000), dropouts (Hunt & Hopko, 2009), future criminal acts, family problems, substance abuse (US).
School refusal is one of the main factors requiring immediate action in the various problems facing school and family today. School refusal is an act or example that does not leave school without permission. Not only does it lower the high school graduation rate and college admission rate, it also deprives public funds of existing public school attendance. There is no reason for a student to become a fugitive. There are many factors that make students decide to skip school repeatedly. Not going to school is even more problematic than school. It affects students, families, and communities. So E2Learn is trying to overcome some of the main reasons for school refusal
Truancy school is a common theme of popular culture. Ferris Bueller's Day Off is about the role Chicago plays in distrust of his girlfriend and best friend (played by Matthew Broderick). Escape is also the title of the 2008 novel about the student uprising against the authoritarian educational system. In most languages, there are many expressions including expressions of school refusal. In South Africa, proverbs used are bunkers, quail eggs, jump rope and zippo. In Jamaica, it is called skull. Secretly in Guyana. In Antigua and Barbuda, it is called skodding. In New Zealand and Australia, school refusal is called swing, "jigging", give up, or skip school. In the UK it is known as masking (closing) or scraping or rocking, crushing, twisting, "scraping", or tapping. In Wales, castration or sagging. In Liverpool, get off the class or cut, dog in, skiving, play ticky or pugin. In Scotland, jump and bounce on a bunk bed, howling, licking, scraping, on it, or on a raft