Paying the Price
All that convenient virtual learning is coming at a steep price. Sure it’s convenient and a cheap and easy filler but now the piper must be paid.
Virtual learning has left kids and their families with the sense that school is a great place to stop by if you have the time. Long after the end of COVID, school attendance rates have not begun to get back to where they were.
Lots of excuses about why kids are not back in school. But one thing is sure. Math and reading scores are not nearly where they were five years ago. On average reading scores are about a half year behind what they were in 2019. BUT the situation is much worse for some states. Generally, the states with the greatest use of virtual teaching and closing for COVID have lost the most and haven’t recovered.
States that voted Republican tended to lose the least and states that voted Democratic tended to lose the most. That's because Republican led states used less virtual learning and were not quick to close schools. Maryland lost a full year in math achievement. This isn’t a full year below grade level; this is a full year BELOW what the scores were in 2019 which were already low. Reading loss was almost as bad.
Lower socio-economic students have lost the most. Some of these high school students were not in school, so the grabbed low paying jobs which were high paying for a teenager. They haven’t given those jobs up. Kids are staying home from school for family vacations, babysitting younger sibs and "just because". Attending school in person has lost it priority.
You might think school districts have learned something from these data; but they haven’t. One of the latest go to’s for snowy days is to switch kids to virtual learning. They tune in on their tablet devices and tune out on learning. From the district’s perspective these days count as school days and do not need to be made up. From the student’s perspective, we are learning that the learning is never made up. After all, when a nice pile of snow beckons a boring slide show is no competition. Who cares if there is a price to pay, just not yet.
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