Daily Southtown

Education in a pandemic: Not making the grade

- By Jonathan Butcher and Lindsey M. Burke Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Whenit comes to her daughter Emerson’s education, Sarrin Warfield says, she’s “in it to win it.”

When Emerson’s assigned school in South Carolina announced plans for virtual learning this fall, Warfield says she asked herself, “What ifwe jus tmade this inmy backyard and made a school?” After talkingwit­h friends who have children the same age as Emerson, Warfield said, “Let’s do it. Instead of it being a crazy idea, let’s own this process and be really intentiona­l about doing this andmake it happen.”

Warfield is one of the thousands of parents around the country who formed learning pods when assigned schools closed. By meeting in small groups with friends’ and neighbors’ children, these pod families could try to keep at least one of part of their child’s life from being upended because of COVID-19.

The time-honored practice of school assignment did little to help the Warfields— or thousands of other students around the U.S. during the COVID spring …and then C OVID summer and fall. In the beginning of the 2020-21 school year, officials in some of the largest districts in the country reported significan­t enrollment changes fromthe previous school year, especially among younger students.

Officials in Mesa, Arizona, reported a 17% decrease in kindergart­en enrollment after the first twoweeks. In Los Angeles,

Super intendent Austin Beutner reported a 3.4% decrease in enrollment, but said another4% of students couldn’t be found, making the change closer to 7%. Figures are similar in Broward County, Florida, and Houston. In large school districts, these percentage­s amount to over 10,000 children per district.

Some of these changes can be attributed to learning pods. But officials in large cities and even those representi­ng entire states simply reported having no contact with many students.

Under normal circumstan­ces, if thousands of children who were once in school suddenly were nowhere to be found, this would be an issue of national concern. Hearings would be held, and officials would demand to knowwhat is happening with schools around the country. Loud calls for change would be heard.

But life during the pandemic is anything but normal.

Likewise, if more students around the country were failing— say, twice the figure from last year— thiswould also be worrisome, right? FromLos Angeles toHouston to Chicago to Fairfax, Virginia, school officials and researcher­s are now reporting that the proportion of students earning D’s and F’s in the first semester has increased, doubling in some cases, in comparison to the last school year.

Yet across the U.S., many school districts, especially those in large metro areas, still remain closed to in-person learning for some if not all grades andmay not reopen at the start of 2021.

According to the Pew Research Center, 72% of parents in lower-income brackets report being “very” or “somewhat” concerned this fall that their children are “falling behind in school as a result of the disruption­s caused by the pandemic.” With thousands of students not in class, even virtually, and falling grades among those who are attending, whocan blame them?

For taxpayers and policymake­rs looking for lessons in the pandemic, the utter failure of school assignment systems to provide quality-learning options to all students, especially the most vulnerable, is clear.

The quality and consistenc­y of the education a child received during the pandemic has been dependent on the attendance boundary in which that child’s family lives.

At the same time, somany of the issues plaguing education during the pandemic — and for that matter, the entire century leading up to the pandemic— are rooted in policies that fund school systems, rather than individual students.

Allowing dollars to followchil­dren directly to any public or private school of choice is a critical emergency policy reform that states should pursue. Such a policy change is overdue.

Since it’s anyone’s guess howsoon life will get back to normal, we can’twait any longer for the system to fix itself.

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