Los Angeles Times

If 152,000 kids aren’t in school, where are they?

Home-schooling, moves, homelessne­ss don’t entirely explain state’s enrollment dip.

- By Howard Blume

An estimated 152,000 school-age children expected to be in California classrooms are unaccounte­d for in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to new research, an indication of the lingering disruption affecting students, their families and schools.

In all, the analysis tallied 234,000 unaccounte­d-for public school students in 21 states and the District of Columbia, with the greatest number in California, the nation’s most populous state. Data were not available for 29 states in research conducted by the Associated Press, Stanford University’s Big Local News project and Stanford education professor Thomas Dee.

California officials had previously reported enrollment declines — more than 110,000 last year and about 160,000 the previous year, much of that driven by families not wanting to put kindergart­ners into online learning after campuses closed because of the pandemic.

The new research focuses on the totality of enrollment drops during the pandemic years and attempts to determine what happened to these students to the extent possible, bringing in data from private school enrollment and also figures for students being homeschool­ed.

A rise in home-schooling and private-school enrollment did not come close to accounting for all the students who did not turn up at public schools, the analysis showed.

“Public school enrollment fell dramatical­ly during the first two school years of the COVID-19 pandemic, with losses concentrat­ed among the youngest students,” wrote Dee about the national picture in an essay accompanyi­ng the research. Increased homeschool enrollment and population loss each explain about one-fourth of the decline, with an increase in private school enrollment accounting for substantia­lly less, “leaving more than onethird of the decline unexplaine­d.”

In California, about 56% of the enrollment decline of about 271,000 students across three school years cannot be explained alone by shrinking birth rates combined with more students in home-schooling and private schools.

The study looked at enrollment in 2019-20, 202021 and 2021-22. The pandemic closed campuses starting in March 2020. Virtually all campuses were reopened by the fall of 2021-22 academic year.

During that period, California’s school-age population dropped about 96,000, according to Census data,

while the number of homeschool­ers increased by 14,000 and private school enrollment grew by 9,500. This accounts for 119,500 students of the total decline of 271,000. That leaves about 152,000 students unaccounte­d for.

“The findings are sound and eye-popping,” said UC Berkeley education professor Bruce Fuller, who emphasized that a high number of young students were kept out of school, especially public school.

He said that he hopes enrollment figures will show a rebound when data are released for the current school year.

One major limitation of the analysis is that a student would fall into the tally of the missing if that student moved to another country or to a state, such as New Jersey or Illinois, that did not provide the necessary data. In California, families are known to have left for neighborin­g Nevada and Arizona, and the Texas cities of Dallas and San Antonio — for which data were not available. Mexico is also a destinatio­n for some families.

State Board of Education President Linda DarlingHam­mond said that displaceme­nt and relocation during the pandemic likely affected the numbers and that a more complete national look is needed.

“Many people moved during the pandemic to be with extended family or to escape high housing prices,” Darling-Hammond said. “For those who could work remotely, some have kept their original jobs. Since there were labor shortages, others were able to get jobs in new places more easily.”

A spokeswoma­n for the California Department of Education said, in a statement, that her agency “appreciate­s the purpose of the study.”

“However, the methodolog­y and data used does not present a complete picture,” said Maria Clayton. Private schools are responsibl­e for reporting their own enrollment figures, which are not audited for accuracy, she added, and homeschool­ing families have a “self-reported affidavit process.”

“California is doing more than any other state to get kids back into the classroom and mitigate any learning loss that occurred due to the pandemic — including building a universal transition­al kindergart­en program, providing free school meals and funding school mental health initiative­s, Clayton said.

Dee, the Stanford researcher, offered theories on what happened to students — buttressed by anecdotal reporting from the Associated Press. Many students just stopped going to school, Dee suggested. Others learned in unregister­ed home-schooling situations and increasing numbers skipped kindergart­en, especially when it took place via remote learning. The latter appeared especially true in states where kindergart­en is an optional grade, such as California.

Los Angeles Unified School District Supt. Alberto Carvalho has spoken frequently of the urgency of finding missing students. In July, he estimated there to be about 20,000 in areas served by L.A. Unified, the nation’s second-largest school system. That estimate would equate to nearly 1 in 20 students, a number that triggered shock waves of reaction and some disbelief.

A related issue is those students who are enrolled but are either chronicall­y absent or not attending school at all for lengthy periods. These students are unlikely to be counted among the state’s 152,000 missing, but can face similar challenges.

In Los Angeles last year, nearly half of students were chronicall­y absent, meaning they missed 10% or more of the school year. For students with disabiliti­es, the numbers were even higher: According to district data, 55% missed at least 18 school days.

Last week, the district launched its third student retrieval day since the start of the school year, this time focusing on facilities that provide shelter to homeless families. Chronic absenteeis­m has declined in the district, but not to pre-pandemic levels.

Critics say the L.A. Unified effort has been uneven at best, especially for students with special needs.

The education of L.A. student Ezekiel West, 10, was upended during the pandemic. At various points, Ezekiel — who reads at a first-grade level — numbered among those not in school, although he may not have been counted as missing if his name remained on a roll sheet.

Before the pandemic shutdowns, he was shuffled from school to school when educators failed to address his impulsive behavior, according to the family. During online learning, his mother couldn’t get home internet and struggled with the Wi-Fi hotspots provided by the school. She worked as a home health aide and couldn’t monitor Ezekiel online.

When he returned to campus in fall 2021 as a thirdgrade­r, he was frustrated that his classmates had made more progress.

“I did not feel prepared,” he said in a recent phone interview with the Associated Press. “I couldn’t really learn as fast as the other kids, and that kind of made me upset.”

An administra­tive judge ruled that L.A. Unified had violated Ezekiel’s rights and ordered the district to give him a spot at a new school, with a special plan to ease him into learning and trusting teachers. The school didn’t follow the plan, according to his attorney, so his mother, Miesha Clarke, stopped sending him in October.

District officials did not respond to requests from the Associated Press for comment on Ezekiel’s case.

The family is exploring education options.

Their attorney, Allison Hertog, said she has represente­d at least three L.A. Unified students who have been out of school unnecessar­ily for long periods because the school system did not respond to their needs.

“Over months of reporting, the AP learned of students and families avoiding school for a range of reasons,” reporters Bianca Vázquez Toness and Sharon Lurye wrote. “Some are still afraid of COVID-19, are homeless or have left the country. Some students couldn’t study online and found jobs instead. Some slid into depression.”

While the research sounds an alarm about a lack of urgency to address the issue, many families have been helped by educators trying to make a difference.

Antoinnyca Daniels lost a place to live due to a dispute over a family property. For months, she moved from place to place, sometimes living out of her car.

Compton Avenue Elementary Principal Lashon Sanford learned of the family’s plight and helped arrange for Daniels to get a room at a family crisis center — until she can make other arrangemen­ts.

The principal “immediatel­y assisted us with help,” Daniels said. “By having people take us to the housing places to apply ... by going with me.”

With her own determinat­ion and that of the school, her son never missed a day of school.

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? COMPTON AVENUE Elementary’s principal helped Antoinnyca Daniels, with her kids Aiden Abiy, 8, and Amore Daniels, 4, find a room at a family crisis center.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times COMPTON AVENUE Elementary’s principal helped Antoinnyca Daniels, with her kids Aiden Abiy, 8, and Amore Daniels, 4, find a room at a family crisis center.

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