Los Gatos Weekly Times

Poll: School closures affected academics

4 in 10 parents say kids fell behind, but majority still support Newsom's handling of schools

- By John Woolfolk jwoolfolk@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

More than 4 in 10 parents say their kids fell behind academical­ly during the COVID-19 pandemic, when California trailed the country in reopening classrooms to in-person learning, according to a poll released April 27.

Now that their kids are back in the classroom, 3 out of 4 parents support the state's decision to no longer require masks. But twothirds of them are OK requiring students to receive COVID-19 vaccines once they're approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

The new poll from the Public Policy Institute of California offers a glimpse of how parents in the Golden State feel state leaders and educators have dealt with the turmoil from the pandemic and the impact it's had on the state's 6 million K-12 students.

“I think it's important to note that there are many people who feel that students suffered and that they're concerned about the direction of the school system,” said PPIC president and CEO Mark Baldassare.

California, the first state to impose a statewide stayhome order in 2020, was the slowest to resume in-person instructio­n a year ago amid growing evidence students were falling behind and suffering mentally and emotionall­y from prolonged remote online instructio­n that substitute­d for in-class

teaching.

Parent frustratio­ns helped force Gov. Gavin Newsom to face a recall vote in September. But he handily defeated it, arguing during the campaign that states that reopened schools faster and declined to mandate face masks and vaccines suffered more COVID-19 deaths in their overall population.

The poll reflected that seeming disconnect, with large numbers of parents and California­ns frustrated, but majorities supporting Newsom's handling of K-12 schools and saying public education is going in the right direction, though those feelings were sharply divided along partisan lines. Among the findings: • 44% of parents with

school-age children and 46% with kids in public school say their youngest student “has fallen behind academical­ly during the pandemic.” Of those, 19% of parents with school-age children and 20% with kids in public school say their child has fallen behind “a lot.” By the same measure, 53% of parents with schoolage children and 54% with public school kids say their child did not fall behind.

• 57% of California adults say the state's K-12 public education system “is generally going in the right direction,” and 39% in the wrong direction. Though 77% of Democrats say it's going in the right direction, 79% of Republican­s and 51% of independen­ts say it's going in the wrong direction.

• 42% of California adults think the quality of education in the state's K-12 public schools has gotten worse, while 13% say it has improved over the past few years.

• 60% of California adults approve and 36% disapprove of the way public education has been handled by Newsom, including 83% of Democrats and 53% of independen­ts approving and 78% of Republican­s disapprovi­ng.

The poll also found that 62% of California adults and public school parents say teacher salaries are too low. The National Education Associatio­n ranks California third among states in average teacher salary at $85,856 and fifth in starting pay at $49,933. New York is tops in average salary

at $90,222 and ninth in starting pay, $47,618.

Megan Bacigalupi, executive director of the advocacy group CA Parent Power and a parent whose sons attend school in Oakland Unified School District, helped organize efforts to urge schools to reopen and drop mandates sooner. She said her group's own survey out this week also shows high concern among parents about students falling behind.

The Parent Power survey found 61% of parents say their child's education has fallen behind because of school closures, including 23% who say they are “extremely far behind.” It also found parents more divided on state leaders, with 40% having favorable and 49% unfavorabl­e feelings about

Newsom. Parent Power's survey involved 1,242 interviews in California from April 8-13.

“The vast majority of California­ns, 80%, and parents of school aged children, 81%, believe that children will be dealing with the consequenc­es of the pandemic for years to come,” Bacigalupi said, “and this presents an opportunit­y to our statewide leaders, including Governor Newsom, to prioritize the well-being of children in his budget and priorities going forward.”

Baldassare said the PPIC poll results in many ways reflect the recall results in terms of parents and voters holding Newsom to account for their frustratio­ns.

“People who were not with him aren't with him,” Baldassare said, “and those who were with him are still with him.”

But Baldassare added that the numbers expressing concern should make state leaders uncomforta­ble with elections around the corner.

“I think when you've got numbers of people — it's not a majority, but quite a few — saying schools or the economy are going in the wrong direction, I think that suggests that in that kind of environmen­t, people are going to be looking at change as a possibilit­y,” Baldassare said.

The PPIC poll was conducted from March 30-April 13 of 1,591 California adults in English, Spanish, Chinese, Vietnamese and Korean. That included 1,059 likely voters, 424 parents, 342 parents with schoolage children and 307 public school parents. The margin of error in percentage points was plus or minus 3.3 for the total sample, 6.1 for parents, 6.9 for parents with school-age children and 7.2 for public school parents.

 ?? ANDA CHU — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Asaf Bar-tura and daughter Alma, 7, a first grader, protest along Solano Avenue near the Albany Unified School District Student Enrollment Center in Albany on Feb. 10. Parents and students held the demonstrat­ion to call for the reopening of schools.
ANDA CHU — STAFF ARCHIVES Asaf Bar-tura and daughter Alma, 7, a first grader, protest along Solano Avenue near the Albany Unified School District Student Enrollment Center in Albany on Feb. 10. Parents and students held the demonstrat­ion to call for the reopening of schools.

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