Truro News

E-learning is just collecting dust

Nova Scotia students’ learning losses piling up alongside the snow

- ALEX WHALEN PAIGE MACPHERSON Alex Whalen is associate director of Atlantic Canada Prosperity and Paige Macpherson is associate director of education policy at the Fraser Institute.

In a world increasing­ly connected by technology, and given the Nova Scotia government recently spent tens of millions of dollars enabling at-home learning, one might think that students would seamlessly shift to online learning during the recent snowstorms to avoid losing crucial instructio­nal time. Unfortunat­ely, that’s not happening.

VIRTUAL SCHOOL

During COVID school closures, the Nova Scotia and federal government­s spent at least $31.5 million on “virtual school” and other technologi­cal upgrades so students could, according to the provincial government, “succeed, even in an at-home learning environmen­t.”

Unfortunat­ely, the electronic learning infrastruc­ture — which includes Chromebook­s, laptops and ipads for students and teachers, and additional support and new teachers for Nova Scotia Virtual School — is collecting dust in a corner while Nova Scotia kids are falling further behind.

This isn’t some blip in an otherwise strong record of instructio­nal time for Nova Scotia students. During COVID school closures, students in the province missed at least 125 days of school between March 2020 and February 2022, more than any other province (except Ontario), generating a significan­t learning loss from which students have not caught up.

BELOW AVERAGE

Indeed, according to the latest results (2022) from the Programme for Internatio­nal Assessment (PISA), the gold standard of testing worldwide, Nova Scotia 15-year-olds trail the Canadian average in reading by 18 points and trail the Canadian average in math by 27 points. For context, PISA characteri­zes a 20-point drop as one year of lost learning.

Moreover, between 2003 and 2022, Nova Scotia student performanc­e in reading dropped by 24 points — more than one year of learning loss — and dropped by 45 points in math. In other words, in math, 15-year-old Nova Scotia students today are more than two years behind where Nova Scotia 15-year-olds were in 2003.

These troubling trends underscore the need to put the existing e-learning infrastruc­ture to work. During a recent two-week period, students in the Cape Breton-victoria Regional Centre for Education school district missed seven days of school due to snow. And some students missed an additional five days due to weather and power outages. That’s nearly three weeks.

LIFELONG IMPACTS

While more instructio­nal time is not a silver bullet for student success — and with power outages, e-learning is not a perfect solution — it could still make a big difference.

According to internatio­nal research, missed classroom time causes learning loss and impacts children for life, reducing their lifelong earnings. Nova Scotia education researcher Paul Bennett found that lost classroom time due to inclement weather compounds absenteeis­m and sets back student achievemen­t and social progress.

The Tim Houston government should ensure Nova Scotian students have access to teacher-directed e-learning when schools are closed and, like other jurisdicti­ons in Canada and the United States, abandon the practice of simply cancelling school due to inclement weather. It’s simply common sense.

The snow may pile up, but there’s no good reason why learning loss must pile up with it. Parents are right to demand access to the e-learning they’ve already paid for through their tax dollars.

 ?? FILE ?? Snow-clearing efforts are ongoing in Cape Breton, where students missed seven days of school in February due to snow.
FILE Snow-clearing efforts are ongoing in Cape Breton, where students missed seven days of school in February due to snow.

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