FORT WORTH, Texas -- Jennifer Perez was handed the keys to a sleek new car after winning a giveaway program for perfect attendance. But she can't drive it.
Perez, 18, is feverishly working to get her driver's license so she can take the Dodge Challenger on the road.
"I was like, 'Oh, why didn't I do this before?'" said Perez, who just graduated from Diamond Hill-Jarvis High School.
So on Friday, when Perez joined three other teen winners at the Hurst, Texas, dealership that donated the cars, Perez's uncle got behind the wheel.
The car giveaways illustrate how far school districts will go to boost attendance, which results in more state funding and encourages top academic performance. Besides cars, students can get electronics and gift cards.
"We are trying to inspire kids to stay in school. Every kid is not going to have perfect attendance, but every child has a decision in the morning: Get my homework, figure out what I'm going to wear to school and get to school," said Ernie Horn, executive director of Score a Goal in the Classroom, a Fort Worth, Texas-based nonprofit that coordinates incentive programs for many school districts in North Texas.
But more than perfect attendance is rewarded. In the Fort Worth district, Paschal High School senior Robyn Sims was awarded a new Honda Civic LX from Frank Kent Honda for winning the Words for Wheels essay contest. Other finalists got prize packages that include a year of free oil changes, custom detailing and window tinting.
More than 250 students submitted essays.