The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Expecting more from public education

Parent says pandemic exposed glaring gaps in system that ought to be addressed.

- By Beth Collums Beth Collums holds a master’s degree in clinical psychology and has been a child and family therapist. She has four children and lives in Dekalb County.

I read recently that jet propulsion engineers landed a rover on a planet that required a journey of seven months, virgin to any human exploratio­n. The level of accuracy and difficulty of this 300- million- mile trip to Mars was described as akin to shooting an arrow from Washington to Texas and hitting a bull’s- eye. The rover had to descend to the surface of Mars at rocket speeds, while battling galeforce winds, razor blade craggy terrain and heat comparable to the sun.

How is it that we can put a remote- controlled science lab on Mars, but when it comes to our educationa­l system, we’re using guts and guesses at best in bringing equal learning opportunit­ies to students?

The coronaviru­s pandemic hasn’t created the gap in education, it’s simply revealed it.

Our country’s wealth disparity is increasing: The distance between rich families and poor is growing every year and has for decades. Education is increasing­ly available through online platforms, and accessibil­ity to books and meetings via websites and portals has risen; however, the children in low socioecono­mic brackets often can’t get a consistent wireless internet signal to log on to do research for an online book report. Meanwhile, we face a global pandemic and families with means secured tutors and specialize­d pod learning and fled en masse to private schools.

Even so, everyday citizens don’t seem to be too concerned with all the planning and decisions required to land this ship.

Interest in public education policy is among the lowest concerns at the polls. Citizens have become unconcerne­d with the seemingly trivial nature of the local educationa­l process, such as school boards and representa­tives, while national figures steal the spotlight from our communitie­s with media coverage resembling heavyweigh­t boxing matches. Civic duty has been drowned out by celebrity political debates.

As the coronaviru­s has drawn a spotlight back to local educationa­l leaders, will we maintain collective interest as the trauma of the pandemic fades?

The humdrum, yet complex, policymaki­ng of expanding wireless infrastruc­ture to remote areas, providing healthy balanced school meals, identifyin­g at- risk children in need of counseling and services, and devising teacher- led, classroom- based strategies to pull them to grade level are the small overlooked steps to success. Yet the effectiven­ess of these efforts requires laser precision and creative brilliance on par with rocket science.

Can we address the reality that our teachers are among the lowest- paid profession­al workers, most even qualifying for low- income housing? Will school budgets be weighted even more toward paying for mass academic test measures in an attempt to analyze a problem to its death? Can we view teachers as intelligen­t, capable assets instead of political punching bags?

Hundreds of families have withdrawn their children from public education and fled to private schools amid the confusion and frenzied efforts of local schools to educate in the pandemic. Some have moved homes to seek a better school district elsewhere. This leaves some school districts seeing enrollment decline at record rates. Meanwhile, a large percentage of families across the country have suffered reduced work hours, pay cuts and even a complete loss of income and are evermore dependent on the local public school system.

With these dueling trajectori­es, how will we come out of the struggle with the coronaviru­s in response to the education of our children? Will the only remnants of this year be more hand sanitizer stations and roped- off water fountains?

The way we have achieved great things in science and technology is through great effort put toward goals that were dreamed and once thought unattainab­le, with the help of the brightest minds, appropriat­e funding and adequate freedom to try and fail without being written off as a failure. The same rigor and goal of excellence should guide our children’s schooling. We have expected little from our state public education system, and we have reaped what we have sown.

In the rover landing on Mars, the scientists have determined that the most dangerous part of the mission wasn’t the rocket launch or the flight of about 300 million miles or the compiling of billions of data sets, but rather it’s the final moments of landing, the last few feet. Can we engage in the fight to create a Georgia where every child in public education can thrive as we draw near to the end of this pandemic? The choice is ours; will we simply accept the gap in education as a reality or utilize our platform as citizens and reinvest in the fight?

 ?? TED S. WARREN/ ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The pandemic hasn’t created the gap in education, it’s simply revealed it. With the distance between rich families and poor growing and public schools facing multiple challenges, how will we come out of the struggle with the coronaviru­s in response to the education of our children? Will the only remnants be more hand sanitizer stations and roped- off water fountains?
TED S. WARREN/ ASSOCIATED PRESS The pandemic hasn’t created the gap in education, it’s simply revealed it. With the distance between rich families and poor growing and public schools facing multiple challenges, how will we come out of the struggle with the coronaviru­s in response to the education of our children? Will the only remnants be more hand sanitizer stations and roped- off water fountains?
 ??  ?? Beth Collums
Beth Collums

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