Monterey Herald

Pandemic: Disruption­s to schooling fall hardest on vulnerable students

- By Annie Ma

Even as schools have returned in full swing across the country, complicati­ons wrought by the pandemic persist, often falling hardest on those least able to weather them: families without transporta­tion, people with limited income or other financial hardship, people who don’t speak English and children with special needs.

Coronaviru­s outbreaks in school and individual quarantine orders when students get exposed to the virus make it a gamble on whether they can attend classes in person on any given day. Many families don’t know where to turn for informatio­n, or sometimes can’t be reached.

And sometimes, because of driver shortages, it’s as simple as the school bus not showing up.

Keiona Morris, who lives without a car in McKeesport, Pennsylvan­ia, outside Pittsburgh, has had no choice but to keep her boys at home on days when the bus didn’t arrive. Her two sons have missed about two weeks’ worth of classes because of such disruption­s, she said.

Taking her older son to school on the civic bus system those days would mean not making it home in time to get her youngest to elementary school, she said.

“I feel like they’re leaving my kid behind,” Morris said. “Sometimes, he feels like he’s not important enough to get picked up.”

For some families, it’s a matter of not having the private resources to deal with breakdowns in the public education system. For others, language barriers or other communicat­ion issues leave them uninformed about things like programs that let students return to school despite virus exposures, as long as

they test negative for infection.

And while some students can keep up with school remotely during quarantine­s, others receive little to no instructio­n, or they lack internet or devices to connect.

As districts seek solutions, they have to consider that disproport­ionate burden, said Bree Dusseault, principal at the Center on Reinventin­g Public Education at the University of Washington.

“If you’re going to be using a test as a tool to shorten quarantine, then all students have equal and free and easy access to that test,” she said.

The first day the shortages affected her son’s route, Morris did not see an early morning email notificati­on that her son’s bus would be canceled, and the two of them waited at the stop for a ride that never came.

Staying at home has taken a toll on her kids, who are both more engaged when learning in person. On the days their bus was canceled and they had no access to the day’s lesson, the makeup work built up, putting them behind in class, she said.

For her older son, she said, the transition to middle school and missing social aspects of being with peers have been especially

hard.

The effects of unpredicta­ble stretches at home can mirror those of chronic absenteeis­m and lead to longterm harm to learning, said Robert Balfanz, a research professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Education.

“The irregulari­ty of your attendance is as important as the total amount you miss,” Balfanz said. “It lingers with you because you miss key moments of learning that everything else builds upon, and that can even lead to later frustratio­ns.”

Some families have had more guidance than others in navigating unexpected, unstructur­ed periods of learning at home.

In Seattle, Sarah Niebuhr Rubin’s son was sent home for two weeks when he was identified as a possible virus exposure. Because the exposure counted as an excused absence, Rubin said her son received no live instructio­n and no consistent services for his reading disability, except for two sessions with specialist­s who went out of their way to meet with him.

Without those services, she said, he struggles to complete work without constant supervisio­n, which she could not provide while working from home.

 ?? RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Students board a school bus on New York’s Upper West Side.
RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Students board a school bus on New York’s Upper West Side.

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