Connecticut Post

Lamont says virtual attendance is up, but there’s no data to prove it

- By Jacqueline Rabe Thomas and Kasturi Pananjady

One month into the school year, Gov. Ned Lamont says online education during the pandemic is a success, noting that students are showing up for their virtual classes.

“In April, May, a lot of kids never even logged onto their computer. Now we have 97 percent participat­ing,” he told reporters Tuesday in New Britain, where roughly three-quarters of the students are enrolled to learn entirely from home. That differs, he said, from the spring, when “30 percent of people never activated or logged on their computer.”

But the data doesn’t actually show things have improved.

Last spring, the state collected numbers on different levels of absenteeis­m. Some students logged onto school sporadical­ly, maybe only once or twice a week, but would occasional­ly go a week without showing up. Others connected just a few times.

Now, officials are only asking how many all-remote students logged on at least once each week. During the third week of school, that result shows that 3.9 percent of those students went completely MIA. Just a few weeks ago, that figure was at least 4.5 percent of students learning remotely; the number of students who haven’t logged on has since decreased by over 1,300, while the number of students studying remotely has simultaneo­usly increased by 1,200.

Last spring, that datapo int of how many students didn’t log on at all was almost identical: 4 percent. There’s no way to gauge if more students are attending more often than in the spring, because the state isn’t asking about it .

State department officials said they didn’t ask for more details because they didn’t want to burden districts with additional reporting requiremen­ts. But such tracking i s crit i cal, civil rights advocates say, because a disproport­ionate share of students attending class entirely online go to school in districts where large shares of students f all behind academical­ly. In the state’s 10 most chronicall­y str uggling districts, 58 percent of the students are learning entirely online, compared to 25 percent in all the other districts, state data shows.

“One of the most important measuremen­ts to look at is chronic absenteeis­m, because it’s so related to student engagement, student success and penetratio­n into the juvenile justice system,” said Martha Stone, executive director of the Center for Children’s Advocacy, which helps children from low-income f amilies overcome barriers to be successful in school. “When you already had issues of chronic absenteeis­m in these major districts, and then you overlay the COVID problems and connectivi­ty problems, it ’s really important to get accurate measures not only for chronic absenteeis­m, but for student achievemen­t, because they will both be affected. It ’s really important to measure it consistent­ly and accurately.”

The State Department of Education is now working to set up a better system to track average daily student attendance. It is supposed to be released later this month and will provide a breakdown of students attending in-person vs. online, and by race and ethnicity.

“We’re in the midst of standing up massive new collection and reporting systems that not only require technical developmen­t, but involve major policy, explanatio­n, and clarificat­ion for educators in all schools and districts across the entire state. Efforts like this normally take years to implement; we’re implementi­ng them in weeks and months,” said Peter Yazbak, spokesman for the education department.

Different classroom setup, same absenteeis­m

Lamont, who is f acing considerab­le pressure from the state’s teachers’ unions not to force schools to reopen, nonetheles­s strongly f avors students attending school in-person. But he is unwilling to force districts to offer students in-person learning or to require students to attend it .

“Look, not ever ybody feels comfortabl­e go ing back to the classroom f ull time,” said Lamont, po inting out that only 370 of the state’s 5 30,000 students have tested positive for COVID-19 since school began. “Is [online learning] as good as in-person? No. … Look, for these kids who are disconnect­ed, we’re do ing ever ything we can to get them connected if they can’t come to a classroom in terms of what we can do for [getting them] a Chromebook and regular communicat­ion – but there’s always room for improvemen­t.”

In New Haven, the state’s largest school district that has not reopened for general education students, one-in-15 students have not been logging on even once each week. In New London, where just over a third of the students are learning completely online, one-in-5 students didn’t log on a single time during the Sept. 21-25 week. In East Haven, one-in-5 students went completely MIA.

Asked if districts will be given any incentive or nudge to get more students back in school, Lamont said that i sn’t the plan.

“Look, I can only do so much by f i at. If New Haven parents and teachers don’t feel confident with their kids going to school, I am not go ing to order them to go back to school,” he said. “I’d use moral persuasion, not f i at. ”

In New Britain, where the governor visited earlier this week, 2 .2 percent of students didn’t log on at all, a statistic he celebrated.

The average daily attendance is likely much lower, however.

Teachers inter viewed at Tuesday’s event said roughly 80 percent to 90 percent of their online students are showing up daily. However, they po inted out, that aligns with what they were seeing before the pandemic moved students online.

“We had a chronic absenteeis­m problem before. We still have one,” said Colleen Moffett-Mals. “It might actually be a bit better because for some kids it ’s easier to log in at home, and they prefer online.”

Fellow teacher Carolyn Ganley agreed. “Fifty to 75 percent of them are engaged, and online and do ing great. There are some who I think are still in bed, it’s dark in the room, or they don’t turn on their camera, and there are some who don’t get up and get online for classes, so that’s what we are working on. But the majority of the kids are there and they are ver y engaged,” she said.

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