Gulf Today

Students bore the brunt of COVID-19 pandemic and are feeling its effects on their education

- Katherine Prange,

As COVID-19 changed our landscape, K-12 students saw their world shrink to the confines of their computers. Because so many districts in Illinois were unprepared for remote learning, students’ grades in the last quarter of the 2020 school year could not have a negative impact on their second semester grade for that year. Many students then had no incentive to work. For those happy with their grades, coasting for the rest of the year was a no-brainer. Kids whose families struggled to make ends meet replaced school with work, and education was placed on the back burner — a different “normal.”

Students in dual credit classes had a different path. While nothing could negatively affect their high school grades, dual credit classes continued. Since colleges and universiti­es moved quickly to a remote learning environmen­t, high school students enrolled in those classes moved forward as well.

This didn’t please my dual credit kiddos.

While their fellow students had the perceived choice to work or not, these kids, if they wanted to earn a decent grade for the college portion of the class, had to give 100% to their dual credit courses. It wasn’t perfect, but students kept working, learning and puting effort into their education.

Students struggled in the 2020-21 school year too. Many schools remained open, oten seesawing back and forth between in-person and remote instructio­n. Some schools focused solely on remote learning; other schools used a hybrid schedule. School administra­tion officials and teachers worked to find a solution that helped students yet still followed ever-changing COVID-19 guidelines. And while they tried their hardest, students bore the brunt of COVID-19.

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, finally acknowledg­ed that remote learning was not successful for students. I was in a unique situation because I taught in a remote seting and took classes during COVID-19. My experience as a learner mirrored my students’ experience: Instructor­s did most of the talking, and students chimed in at the beginning and end of class only. The same scenario happened in many high school classes. If a student didn’t feel comfortabl­e with or know a teacher, he or she didn’t talk during class and oten used excuses like poor internet for not joining the conversati­on. Geting students to participat­e or feel comfortabl­e in a remote environmen­t was close to impossible. COVID-19 took a small classroom issue and created an obstacle difficult to overcome.

Another issue that hindered remote education was a lack of computer training. Since many schools weren’t one-to-one with computer technology prior to March 2020, some students remarked that there was litle training on new devices schools implemente­d at the beginning of the 2020-21 school year. Finding assignment­s and completing them, trying to contact a teacher and other obstacles made remote education difficult for students. Moving forward, how can we address the substantia­l learning losses? US Education Secretary Miguel Cardona recently told a roundtable in Tennessee: “It’s time for us to think outside the box and try to create more opportunit­ies for students and the best way to do that is to listen to the students directly.”

But what do students say? For many, COVID-19 meant the loss of educationa­l opportunit­ies. It also meant the loss of social interactio­n, the loss of teacher and class choice, the loss of a full learning experience and the loss of a depth to education, which has eroded their foundation. And while many blame COVID-19 for the struggles they are facing today, some say the pandemic created an environmen­t that allowed them to choose to not work at their highest level. Those students now wish they had thought more about the consequenc­es of not fully embracing remote learning.

This year’s seniors feel the brunt of their learning loss. Some students navigating dual credit classes are struggling with higher-level assignment­s. Studies have shown that students who take dual credit courses oten atend college at a higher rate than their high school peers. However, in a postpandem­ic world, enrolment in dual credit courses has decreased. Students used these courses as a head start to college; some now see them as a hurdle to graduation. Where goals used to be loty, lower expectatio­ns based on educationa­l and foundation­al losses have taken hold.

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