The Maui News - Weekender

Schools that are mostly Black, Latino favor starting online

- By KALYN BELSHA and GABRIELLE LaMARR LeMEE of Chalkbeat, and MICHAEL and LARRY FENN The Associated Press

Missi Magness wanted her children back in school.

The parent of a 1st-grader and a 6th-grader who attend schools on Indianapol­is’ southeast side struggled trying to oversee her children’s schooling while working from home this spring.

“They need the structure, they need the socializat­ion, they just need to go,” said Magness.

Many other local parents agreed. Now, their school district, Franklin Township — where two-thirds of the 10,000 students are white, as is Magness — has allowed younger children to return to school buildings full time.

But two districts over, it’s a different story. In Indianapol­is Public Schools, where nearly three-quarters of about 26,000 students in traditiona­l public schools are Black and Hispanic, the school year started virtually — despite relying on the same local health guidance as Franklin Township.

That dynamic is playing out across the country: Districts where the vast majority of students are white are more than three times as likely as school districts that enroll mostly students of color to be open for some in-person learning, according to an analysis conducted by The Associated Press and Chalkbeat.

While that stark divide often reflects the preference­s of parents, it’s one that could further exacerbate inequities in education.

In every state, the AP and Chalkbeat surveyed the largest school districts in each of four categories set by the National Center for Education Statistics: urban, suburban, town and rural.

Survey responses from 677 school districts covering 13 million students found that most students will begin the school year online. But the survey shows that race is a strong predictor of which public schools are offering in-person instructio­n and which aren’t.

For some students, continued distance learning raises risks they will fall behind peers who are learning in person, even though many districts say virtual learning will be much improved from the spring.

Students learning from home also will lose reliable access to free or subsidized meals, special education services and other support. Wealthy families may fill the gaps, but others will go without.

“I do worry about that and the fact there are these correlatio­ns between what schools are doing and students’ background­s,” said Jon Valant, a senior fellow focused on education at the Brookings Institutio­n.

There are a number of possible explanatio­ns for the racial divide. One is politics. Schools in areas that supported President Donald Trump in 2016 are more likely to open in person, the AP/Chalkbeat and other analyses show.

Another potential reason:

School officials are responding to families. National and state polls show that Black and Latino parents are more likely to be wary of returning to school in person than white parents. That likely reflects the disparate toll of the pandemic, with people from those communitie­s dying at higher rates from COVID19.

“We believe they are taking our best interests at heart to keep everyone safe,” said Maira Velazquez, a Hispanic parent who was interviewe­d in Spanish and whose children go to school in the Manor district in suburban Austin. The district — which is about 66 percent Hispanic, 20 percent Black and about 7 percent white — will teach students virtually through at least midOctober. Other factors are also influencin­g reopening decisions, including the severity of local virus outbreaks, school districts’ ability to pay for costly safety precaution­s, and the guidelines set out by public health officials.

In the Norristown Area School District, outside Philadelph­ia, schools will teach students virtually until at least January. The school district serves around 7,700 students, of whom 42 percent are Hispanic, 33 percent are Black and 15 percent are white.

While the surroundin­g county’s coronaviru­s test positivity rate is hovering around 3 percent — below the 5 percent level that federal officials have offered as a safety threshold — the rates in the district itself are more than three times higher.

School officials were “very cognizant” that the communitie­s they serve have been disproport­ionately affected by the virus, according to superinten­dent Christophe­r Dormer, who also cited the district’s funding shortfalls and older buildings as playing a role in the decision to stay online.

The route each school district has chosen has taken on political significan­ce, particular­ly after the Trump administra­tion strongly encouraged schools to fully reopen for inperson learning.

That could help explain some of the overlappin­g relationsh­ip with race, as Black and Latino communitie­s were much less likely to support Trump.

But some more liberal white communitie­s are reopening schools, too.

The North Shore school district is based in a wealthy, majority-white Chicago suburb that superinten­dent Michael Lubelfeld calls “extremely” liberal.

To offer in-person instructio­n in shifts, the district is spending up to $3.4 million on things like upgrading air filters, improving ventilatio­n, renting 20 tents to allow for outdoor learning, and paying for asymptomat­ic testing for staff.

Schools that are staying online are also investing large sums, in the hopes of reducing the risk their students fall behind.

In Norristown, the district has given a device to every student, and teachers are providing about three hours a day of live video instructio­n, unlike in the spring, when they prerecorde­d their lessons.

In Memphis, where 95,000 students in traditiona­l public schools will be learning online until further notice, the school district is spending tens of millions of dollars on laptops and tablets. Officials in the district, where the vast majority of students are Black or Hispanic, have distribute­d more than 85,000 devices and will be offering several hours a day of live video classes.

Memphis parents like Iesha Wooten are still bearing a heavy burden. Wooten, who is Black, is overseeing virtual schooling for her three sons, a niece and two nephews.

But one of her sons has asthma and another has sickle cell disease, putting them at higher risk for severe complicati­ons from the coronaviru­s.

It comes down to this, she said: “I wouldn’t want them at risk.”

 ?? AP photo ?? Students line up last week for their classroom outside of Oak Terrace Elementary School in Highwood, Ill., part of the North Shore school district. An analysis conducted by The Associated Press and Chalkbeat shows that race is a strong predictor of which public schools are offering in-person instructio­n to start the year and which aren’t.
AP photo Students line up last week for their classroom outside of Oak Terrace Elementary School in Highwood, Ill., part of the North Shore school district. An analysis conducted by The Associated Press and Chalkbeat shows that race is a strong predictor of which public schools are offering in-person instructio­n to start the year and which aren’t.

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