- Getting skipping students to school is the adults' job. This teacher was specifically tasked with doing that.
Granting that this is the case in this story, it seems to be an incredibly common trope in manga and anime for the class president to be tasked with or to voluntarily undertake rounding up truant students. (I'm kind of crap at remembering untranslated titles, so my only examples would be, "the one where the class prez went to the person's house, and the other one, and the one with the tall truant guy," etc.). But it's not rare in fiction, anyway.
Maybe there's a difference between checking on people who just haven't shown up for a while, and long-term hardcore truancy?
We could chalk that up to artistic liberty (after all any author can decide when they want to force some realism into their work and when not). Ultimately it is very common for students to do faculty work (especially the student council), but the point is more that it's not official most of the time and when it is, they get the credit that is assigned to their duties. While the student council can do some adminstrative work, actual guidance and mentorship are the teacher's "privilege".
And sure, I can see that if it's just checking on a classmate it's not a big deal, but if it's a straight up delinquent that needs to be straightened out they might treat it differently.
I was just trying to convey how messed up the school climate in Japan can be. In fiction anything goes.
last edited at Dec 18, 2019 2:39PM