Antelope Valley Press

Continuing education during COVID-19

- Veronique de Rugy Commentary Veronique de Rugy is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

There’s no doubt that the COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted childhood education. In many countries, kids have physically returned to school. In others, schools were never closed. Yet in the United States, many public schools have been closed since March, yielding disastrous results for millions of kids. While scientific data say it’s safe to bring them back, incentives in the school systems are such that many kids continue to be locked up at home rather than receiving a proper education.

A school’s main role is to educate children. They can feed low-income children and supply day care for working parents, but these benefits are secondary to providing a quality education to all enrolled children.

The fact that children and their taxpayer parents are consumers in this scenario should guide the decisions made by superinten­dents and school Boards. But that hasn’t been the case since the start of this pandemic.

For many kids, the last academic year’s schooling ended in March rather than in June. Where I live in

Arlington County, Virginia, some parents feel as though the students who bothered to show up online weren’t really taught new material. A teacher told me in June that absenteeis­m was extremely high, which isn’t surprising given that kids knew there would be no consequenc­es.

Making matters worse, after the summer break, our Arlington schools were hardly more prepared for virtual learning than they were following March’s school closings.

Yet for many kids, better preparatio­n wouldn’t make a real difference. How do you realistica­lly educate kindergart­eners and elementary school students virtually? In Arlington, it took months for the superinten­dent to allow teachers to teach from their classroom, depriving them of the educationa­l tools we taxpayers have paid for and forcing them to improvise, often poorly. How do you provide adequate online instructio­n for students with disabiliti­es? What about students whose native language isn’t English? Even under the best of circumstan­ces, the education is lacking.

When schools closed in March, there were many unknowns. But the latest research supports the fact that this instructio­nal dysfunctio­n is unnecessar­y. Experts now know that locking children at home doesn’t keep people safe from COVID-19’s infectious­ness or mortality, and sending them to school doesn’t carry much risk either. Studies that looked at the reopening of German schools found that “neither the summer closures nor the closures in the fall have had any significan­t containing effect on the spread of SARS-CoV-2 among children or any spill-over effect on older generation­s.” The investigat­ors also didn’t “find any evidence that the return to school at full capacity after the summer holidays increased infections among children or adults.”

The largest study to be published on the issue so far, using data from the United Kingdom, finds no increase in severe Coronaviru­s-related outcomes for adults living with children who go to school. It demonstrat­ed a small increase in infections, which didn’t result in any noticeable bad outcomes.

Since our school closed, many parents, including some from the 800 members of the nonpartisa­n Arlington Parents for Education coalition (where I’m also a member), emailed school officials to alert them to these studies. But instead, these bureaucrat­s decided to essentiall­y trap students in their homes, often without adult supervisio­n. Failing grades, collapsing math skills, increased educationa­l gaps and mental health issues are the results. And for all the pandering in Arlington County about equity, the most affected students were precisely those lower-income and disabled children.

Some educators would like to go back, but their voices are drowned out by the voices who claim that going back is unsafe. The media shares some of the blame for these fears. A new study by Dartmouth economist Bruce Sacerdote and two other researcher­s looked at news stories about COVID-19 and found that the coverage of school re-openings was “overwhelmi­ngly negative, while the scientific literature tells a more optimistic story,” about how “schools have not become the super-spreaders many feared.”

But that’s not the whole story. The superinten­dent and the school Board members have little incentive to change their performanc­e since they won’t be held accountabl­e for this fiasco — not even when faced with a roughly 2,500 drop in projected versus actual Pre-K-12 enrollment in Arlington Public Schools since March. Unlike private employees who would fear for their jobs were they responsibl­e for the loss of paying consumers, these bureaucrat­s have little to fear.

The pandemic has exposed many problems with American society. Let’s use this opportunit­y to address some of the chronic ones we’re seeing in government-supplied K-12 schooling.

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