The Boston Globe

Key things that schools can do to fight learning loss

- By Adria Watson Adria Watson can be reached at adria.watson@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter @adriarwats­on.

Recent results on national and state exams show the severity of the pandemic’s toll on student academic achievemen­t.

Monday’s release of the National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress, or NAEP, also known as the “Nation’s Report Card,” shows Massachuse­tts students lost a decade or more of academic progress.

Experts believe that students’ catching up will require years-long intensive interventi­ons to help close those gaps.

Here’s a look at some of those efforts.

Intensive tutoring

Researcher­s point to tutoring or small-group instructio­n as a key strategy for helping students. They said tutoring must be “high dosage,” or intensive, calling for at least 30 minutes multiple times a week in the subject areas where gaps are the greatest.

Schools also must have a strong data system that properly and quickly identifies students who need this level of interventi­on before they fall behind.

Increasing instructio­nal time

Experts said extending instructio­nal time — including summer school, longer school days, or extended school years — also would help students get back on track. They also recommend so-called double blocking or double dosing of specific core subjects, meaning educators could double the amount of time students are taught in a particular subject, like math.

“I recognize that a lot of people might cringe at more time on academics when kids are feeling a lot of anxiety still and have experience­d a lot of loss, and sometimes trauma from the pandemic,” said Robin Lake, director of the Center on Reinventin­g Public Education, an education research center at Arizona State University’s Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College. “We do have to be mindful of that, but it will not serve them well to ignore these critical gaps before they pay for it longterm.”

High-quality instructio­n

Training educators in best practices in reading or other critical subjects will allow them to better offer high-quality instructio­n for their students, experts said.

For example, Massachuse­tts recently passed a mandate requiring schools to assess reading progress among students in kindergart­en through at least third grade twice a year. The goal is to target efforts to improve early literacy. State education leaders said screenings may help teachers better identify struggling students and catch learning disabiliti­es at earlier ages. Going forward, early-literacy interventi­ons will be critical amid student learning losses, experts said.

Spending federal funds

Billions in federal relief dollars have been designated for schools to address learning gaps, but most of the money has yet to be spent.

Marguerite Roza, the director of Georgetown University’s Edunomics Lab, said there is urgency in tapping those funds now to pay for necessary interventi­ons. She said parents and community members must press districts on how they are spending the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Funds, or ESSER and whether the investment­s are producing positive outcomes for students. Parents also should be asking what specific plans their districts have to get their children back on grade level.

“I think some people may think this money is gone or forgot about it, but this is really the big spending school year,” Roza said. “So this is when we really need a lot of eyes on those investment­s.”

 ?? JIM DAVIS/GLOBE STAFF ?? Aaron Gross tutored a student at the nonprofit 826 Boston during an after-school program last week.
JIM DAVIS/GLOBE STAFF Aaron Gross tutored a student at the nonprofit 826 Boston during an after-school program last week.

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