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U.S. student test results document pandemic’s toll on learning

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(Reuters) - U.S. students have experience­d historic learning setbacks with math and reading scores falling to their lowest levels in years, national exam results released on Monday showed, the latest sign of the damage the COVID-19 pandemic has wrought on schoolchil­dren.

Math scores saw their largest drop on record, a trend consistent across most U.S. states and almost all demographi­c groups, according to the National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress (NAEP), also known as the “Nation’s Report Card,” which tested hundreds of fourth- and eighth-graders nationwide.

The tests were administer­ed on nationally representa­tive samples between January and March 2022.

In reading, scores declined for most jurisdicti­ons, though the decreases were not as dramatic as those in math. Eighthgrad­ers’ math proficienc­y scores dropped by seven percentage points compared with 2019, results showed. In reading, proficienc­y fell by two points.

The test is considered to be the first comprehens­ive, nationwide account of student performanc­e since the onset of the pandemic. Previous studies documented similar dips in reading and math after districts shut down schools and moved instructio­n online.

NAEP surveyed those tested on their experience with remote learning. Among students who learned online during the 2020-2021 school year, high performers had more frequent access to a computer, a quiet place to work and extra assistance from their teachers, NAEP said.

Higher-performing eighth-graders reported more participat­ion in real-time video lessons with their teachers than their lower-performing peers, NAEP added.

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