Data show state far behind in reopening schools
California parents frustrated over the sluggish pace of reopening public schools have long sensed the state was falling behind many others in getting kids back into classrooms, and now an analysis demonstrates with stunning clarity that the Golden State is running almost dead last.
The analysis by Burbio, a community data service in New York that has been auditing 1,200 districts of various sizes across the country on their reopening status since last fall, shows
California 49th among the 50 states in the proportion of students offered in-person instruction.
“California is way behind the rest of the country,” said Burbio co-founder Dennis Roche.
The analysis comes as the reopening debate intensifies in California amid mounting evidence that students can be brought back to classrooms safely, and that remote online “distance learning” has been a poor substitute for in-person learning.
It also comes as infection rates subside across the state after a deadly winter surge. Two Bay Area counties — San Mateo and Marin — advanced to the state’s second-most restrictive red tier, in which schools at all grade levels may open. And even those that remain in the most restrictive purple tier are now at infection rates where the state allows elementary schools to open.
During a COVID-19 relief bill signing ceremony Tuesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom fended off questions from journalists about progress toward reopening more schools. His administration remains locked in talks with fellow Democrats in the state legislature on competing plans to get students back in classrooms.
“We’ve been engaged for weeks now, months, candidly, on getting our schools safely reopened for in-person instruction, doing it in a very deliberative way,” Newsom said, adding he hopes to have more to say “in the next few days.”
Burbio’s team audits districts in all 50 states — representing more than 35,000 schools — and updates the data every 72 hours with changes, checking websites, Facebook pages, local news stories and other publicly available information to determine the learning mode currently in place in each.
They compile the information into an index of 0-100 for each state reflecting the proportion of students offered in-person instruction — 0 for online only, 50 for a hybrid of online and in-person instruction and 100 for traditional in-person instruction five days a week. A formula assigns a blended figure for those with varied instruction modes for different grades.
California’s index score of 11.1 was ahead of only Maryland’s 9.8, and comparable only to Oregon, at 12.8, and Washington, at 19.2. Among other large, populous coastal states with large cities and diverse populations and economies, the index was 90.8 for Texas, 99.9 for Florida, 49.4 for Pennsylvania, 49 for New York and 37.6 for Illinois.
Asked specifically why California trails the rest of the country in reopening, Newsom, who has refused to mandate reopening in favor of a collaborative approach, offered that the state is just emerging from its deadly winter surge and is more populous and complex than others.