San Antonio Express-News

School closures have failed millions of children in U.S.

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Flags have been flying at half-staff across the United States to commemorat­e the half-million American lives lost to the coronaviru­s.

But there is another tragedy we haven’t adequately confronted: Millions of American schoolchil­dren will soon have missed a year of in-person instructio­n, and we may have inflicted permanent damage on some of them, and on our country.

The reluctance of many Republican­s to wear masks and practice social distancing is one reason so many Americans are dead. But the educationa­l losses are disproport­ionately the fault of Democratic governors and mayors who too often let schools stay closed even as bars opened.

The blunt fact is that it is Democrats — including those who run the West Coast, from California through Oregon to Washington state — who have presided over one of the worst blows to the education of disadvanta­ged Americans in history. The result: more dropouts, less literacy and numeracy, widening race gaps and long-term harm to some of our most marginaliz­ed youths.

The San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank this month estimated that educationa­l disruption­s during this pandemic may increase the number of high school dropouts over 10 years by 3.8 percent while also reducing the number of college-educated workers in the labor force. This will shrink the incomes of Americans for 70 years, until the last of today’s students leave the workforce, the bank said.

What that doesn’t capture is the human toll. Rich kids going to private schools glide on through life mostly unaffected, while low-income children often don’t even have internet to attend Zoom classes.

Bellwether Education Partners, a nonprofit focused on underserve­d students, estimates that as many as 3 million children in the U.S. have missed all formal education, in-person or virtual, for almost a year.

“We have to acknowledg­e that there is a large percentage of kids that have ‘disappeare­d’ — students who have never logged in, or logged in and never fully engaged,” said Melissa Connelly, CEO of Onegoal, a nonprofit that does outstandin­g work with low-income high school students.

As of Jan. 29, almost 10 percent fewer high school seniors had submitted Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid forms, a sign that some are losing the chance to attend college.

Closures also exacerbate racial inequity. According to Mckinsey & Co., fifth-graders in schools with mostly students of color mastered only 37 percent of the math that usually would be expected.

Yes, it is hard to open schools during a pandemic. But private schools mostly managed to, and that is true not only of rich boarding schools but also of strapped Catholic schools. As a nation, we fought to keep restaurant­s and malls open — but we didn’t make schools a similar priority, so needy children were left behind.

“The evidence on remote learning suggests that despite the best efforts of teachers, it doesn’t work for a large share of kids,” said Emily Oster, a Brown University economist who has studied the issue. “I think we’ve deprioriti­zed children in a way that will do long-term damage.”

What are the risks of opening schools? We now have a great deal of data in the U.S. and abroad comparing areas that reopened schools versus those that kept them closed. As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found, “in-person learning in schools has not been associated with substantia­l community transmissi­on.” The British Medical Journal this week put it this way in an editorial: “Closing schools is not evidence based and harms children.”

Most evidence aligns with a careful Tulane study that found that in most of the U.S., school openings do not increase coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations. And teachers generally don’t seem at greater risk than people in other occupation­s. While it is crucial to improve ventilatio­n, increase testing and maintain adequate spacing, those steps aren’t always possible — and failure to meet every benchmark shouldn’t be an automatic bar to in-person schooling.

Teachers in some places are suggesting that in-school instructio­n shouldn’t resume even after they are vaccinated, not until students are vaccinated as well. That is an abdication of responsibi­lity to America’s children.

Many Democrats seemed to become more suspicious of inperson schooling last summer when President Donald Trump called for it. We shouldn’t let ourselves be driven by ideology rather than science, and that wasn’t universal.

Maybe new variants of the virus will spread and require school closures — we should be relentless­ly empirical — but that should be a last resort. Yes, there is uncertaint­y. Sure, there are trade-offs. But serving kids in schools should be a higher priority than serving drinks in bars, and we should plan on summer school so lagging children can catch up.

For almost a year now, we as a country have failed millions of America’s most vulnerable children. We must right this wrong.

 ?? NICHOLAS KRISTOF ??
NICHOLAS KRISTOF

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