Times-Call (Longmont)

The Bloomberg Opinion on how propping up failing schools doesn’t help students:

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Four years since the COVID pandemic began, many U.S. school districts are hurtling toward a fiscal crisis. An exodus of students and the pending expiration of federal relief money is forcing officials to weigh the need to close schools. Although that’s certain to cause some disruption, propping up failing schools will only worsen America’s learning-loss crisis.

Overall public-school enrollment is down 2% since 2019, but that figure understate­s the scale of departures in large population centers. Enrollment declines are more than double the national average in California, the country’s largest public-school system, and New York state, the fourth-biggest. About 12% of elementary schools have seen enrollment drop by 20% or more in the past four years. Big cities have suffered the most: In Los Angeles, New York City, Philadelph­ia and Seattle, more than 20% of schools have lost at least one-fifth of their students.

Given that school-funding formulas are typically tied to enrollment, you’d expect that districts would have already faced pressure to tighten their belts. Yet most have managed to avoid that reckoning, thanks to the $191 billion in federal relief funds that schools have received since 2020. Congress stipulated that districts make spending commitment­s by September 2024, a deadline that districts — after a slow start — appear likely to meet.

The problem is that much of the windfall has gone toward adding new staff and giving permanent raises to teachers and administra­tors, with only a fraction targeting student learning loss, through interventi­ons such as tutoring, longer school days and summer instructio­n. Predictabl­y, these soaring personnel costs have saddled districts with expenses they’ll no longer be able to afford once federal aid is used up.

In areas that have experience­d big drops in enrollment, officials are now confrontin­g the need for deep budget cuts, including closing some schools altogether. In cities like Denver, Oakland and Seattle, downsizing proposals have met heavy resistance from teachers unions and concerned parents. Some progressiv­e activists have also opposed closures on the (dubious) theory that shuttering under-enrolled schools will make the neighborho­ods they’re in more desirable to new homebuyers and thus push out lower-income residents.

For district leaders, the overriding priority should be boosting academic performanc­e. Continuing to subsidize failing, halfempty schools penalizes the students stuck in them, who are more likely to be surrounded by disruptive peers. It also siphons away money that would be better spent on tutoring, tackling absenteeis­m and summer school, while preventing good schools from adding instructor­s and extracurri­cular programs. Research shows that when districts close troubled schools and move their students to better ones, the students see sizable gains and local crime rates fall.

Districts should target under-enrolled schools that have shown the worst declines in student achievemen­t. Displaced students should be given preference for available spots in the most successful nearby schools, not just those with excess capacity. Schools that take in new students should be given funds to hire additional teachers, while parents should receive guidance on how to apply to specialize­d and selective district schools. (Raising teacher salaries yet further, as unions would like, is not the answer to declining enrollment.) Federal and state policymake­rs should also make it easier to establish new public charter schools, which could move into unused school buildings and provide families with higherqual­ity local options.

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