Credit Overdue: How States can Mitigate Academic Credit Transfer Problems for Youth in the Juvenile Justice System
Download the report here
Fact sheet
On any given day across the country, more than 48,000 youth are confined to juvenile justice facilities that not only take them away from their homes, but also their schools for weeks or even months at a time. While these facilities typically provide classes to prevent young people from falling behind in their schoolwork, many discover when they return to school that they will not receive full academic credit for their completed coursework, that there is no record of their credits, or that their credits will not count toward graduation. The system has failed them, leaving them further behind.
This problem exists on a national scale, a  national survey of 208 professionals from 135 counties across 34 states and the District of Columbia confirmed that youth across the country frequently don’t receive credit for the work they complete:
- Only 9% of surÂvey respondents said youth always earn credit for all their coursework in detention facilities, which are short-term centers that primarily hold youth waitÂing for their court dispositions.
- Only 17% of respondents reported that youth always earn credit for all work completed in longer-term juvenile justice placement facilities post-adjudication.
- Roughly a quarter of survey respondents (27%) reported that classes in these facilities are not aligned with school or district standards.
- 31% of survey respondents noted that youth do not receive academic credits because records are lost.
When young people do not receive academic credit for coursework completed in juvenile justice facilities, they face a slew of educational consequences, including repeating courses or an entire grade level. Others may find themselves relegated to alternative and disciplinary schools. Unsurprisingly, they become discouraged, and their academic performance sufÂfers, potentially putting a high school diploma farther out of reach. The consequences of not receiving academic credit are particularly devÂastating for youth who are disproportionately represented in the juvenile justice system, includÂing Black and Latinx youth, youth with disabilities, undocumented youth or youth who are English learners, LGBTQ+ youth, and youth who experience multiple levels of discrimination due to their overÂlapping identities.
RECOMMENDATIONS
As long as states and local jurisdictions continue to send young people to juvenile justice facilities, it is unconscionable to deprive them of the educational opportunities and academic credits to which they are entitled.
The following legislative solutions can help ensure youth receive the credit they are due:
Create an infrastructure and structural supports to ensure appropriate and accurate credit transfer.
- Require inter-disciplinary teams to begin rigorous reentry planning as soon as a youth enters a facility.
- Require school districts and schools to designate a transition coordinator to assist youth returning from juvenile justice facilities by ensuring that transcripts are complete and transferred in a timely manner, and that the school understands and awards credit for completed work.
- Require schools to maintain accurate and complete records.
Provide prompt access to credit-bearing courses to all youth inside juvenile justice facilities.
Encourage juvenile justice facilities and school districts to enact policies that promote graduation, including providing youth with various options and pathways that lead to a high school diploma.
Mandate accountability, oversight, and enforcement measures to support meaningful implementation.
For more information, read the report here.
Photo by ZUMA Press Inc / Alamy Stock Photo