The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Summer funding helped school districts address disparitie­s

- By Annie Ma

CHARLOTTE, N.C. >> After another pandemic-disrupted school year, organizers of vastly expanded summerlear­ning opportunit­ies are investing heavily in efforts to make them accessible to the most vulnerable students.

While there have been success stories, the programs have faced many of the same challenges that educators have been up against since the pandemic hit:

• Attendance has been inconsiste­nt.

• Some families have lost interest.

• COVID-19 still has many reluctant to let students learn in-person.

Educators also have had to address persistent barriers to access for summer programs for families that juggle work and child care, and have limited access to transporta­tion.

“We’re starting from a really unequal playing field,” said Halley Potter, a senior fellow at The Century Foundation who studies educationa­l inequity. “There’s a lot that school districts have to do, and community organizati­ons that are running these programs as well, in order to help pick that up.”

The summer programs offered by schools and community groups are powered by an infusion of private and public funding, including billions of dollars in federal stimulus money, to help students catch up on learning. School districts targeted their outreach to students identified as high-need, including students with failing grades in core classes or in high-poverty neighborho­ods.

Overcoming poverty

When Peñasco Independen­t School District, which serves roughly 350 students in New Mexico, announced a summer program this year, demand overwhelme­d the number of slots until the district doubled the number of seats available.

But of the 85 children signed up, more than half would not be able to attend if it weren’t for district-provided transporta­tion services.

In Peñasco, pervasive intergener­ational poverty has pushed school districts to embrace the so-called “community schools” model that provides services like counseling, transporta­tion, internet access and other resources, ensuring participat­ion in school programs.

In the rural district, community schools director Michael Noll said, some families don’t own a car. Some who do have periods where they can’t afford gas. And others are often juggling work and child care, unable to constantly shepherd children back and forth.

The district runs three buses to make sure those 50 kids can attend. Like many families in these rural foothills of the Rocky Mountains, social worker Carmen Lyn Romero lives on a dirt road too narrow for a school bus.

Romero, who balanced taking care of her five children with serving nearby tribal reservatio­n Picuris Pueblo, relied on an SUV the district sent to pick up her children.

“The school has been so accommodat­ing to my kids, to pick them up and drop them off. I can’t do that,” said Romero, 28.

Even before the pandemic, students’ summer experience­s divided heavily along socioecono­mic lines. Middle- and upper-class students typically experience learning gains over the summer, and are more likely to have access to summer enrichment, Potter said.

In contrast, low-income students typically see learning loss, Potter said. Families often struggle to find slots in affordable summerenri­chment programs, where demand can readily outpace the number of available seats.

The dramatical­ly expanded number of seats available through school districts this year eased some of those pressures, and targeted outreach policies aimed to get high-need students into those slots.

Thousands attend

Charlotte-mecklenbur­g Schools in North Carolina typically does not host a summer session, but offered more than 30,000 slots this year to any student interested and saw an average daily attendance of around 15,000.

While any student could sign up and get a seat, the district identified those with D’s or F’s in core classes, students with unstable housing, or who were chronicall­y absent, and students with special needs for individual outreach, including home visits and phone calls to inform families about registrati­on.

About 65,000 students were identified as at-risk under those criteria, and nearly 20,000 of those children signed up for a summer slot. The program saw an average daily attendance of about 10,000 at-risk students.

Tangela Williams, who is overseeing summer programmin­g, said that because attendance was not mandatory, some students came only on certain days of the week, or started during the middle of the 24-day program. While some parents said they were no longer interested, staff members contacted each family if a student missed three consecutiv­e days, to provide any support needed in case the student wanted to return.

Williams said that while there were limits to what could be done, she hoped the experience would go beyond teaching content and help students make the transition back to in-person learning.

“A percentage of our kids who are attending summer camp were full-remote kids during the school year,” Williams said. “Having them in school this summer is a way to reacclimat­e them to school life with new processes and socializat­ion that they’re going to have with their peers.”

The impact of extended school closures and the coronaviru­s pandemic has fallen unevenly across communitie­s. Black and Latino families, who were more likely to get sick or face serious health consequenc­es from the virus, tended to keep their children in remote learning at higher rates, even as districts increasing­ly offered inperson options.

The trust factor

Building relationsh­ips and trust with families was crucial to reengaging students who had largely been disconnect­ed from the school system, said Kendra Banks, chief of arts and learning academies at Young Audiences of Maryland, which partners with Baltimore City Schools to run arts-integrated educationa­l summer camps.

Some parents were still hesitant to send their children back to in-person programmin­g because of the coronaviru­s, Banks said. The program offered weekly testing and walked parents through all the additional safety protocols to reassure them, Banks said.

 ?? NANCY PIERCE — VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Second-grade students take part in the classroom learning portion of Camp CMS, Charlotte-mecklenbur­g Schools’ summer program, in Charlotte, N.C., on June 17. Across the country, school districts expanded their summer offerings by leveraging federal pandemic relief funding.
NANCY PIERCE — VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Second-grade students take part in the classroom learning portion of Camp CMS, Charlotte-mecklenbur­g Schools’ summer program, in Charlotte, N.C., on June 17. Across the country, school districts expanded their summer offerings by leveraging federal pandemic relief funding.

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