Boston Herald

Poll: Many parents not satisfied

16% would hold kids back a year after poor instructio­n in crisis

- By Rick Sobey

Fewer than six of out 10 Massachuse­tts parents say their child has learned enough during the coronaviru­s pandemic to stay on track and advance to the next grade level in the fall, according to a new poll released Sunday night.

About one of out six Bay State parents — or 16% — say they would consider holding their child back a grade, according to a Pioneer Institute poll on how K-12 education has functioned during the COVID-19 pandemic.

More than a quarter — 26% — say they’re unsure whether their child’s learning was adequate enough to stay on track. The remaining 58% of parents responded that they think their children have learned enough to advance to the next grade.

Twenty-one percent of Massachuse­tts parents believe their children’s education has been “entirely compromise­d” as a result of learning remotely.

The poll on how K-12 education has functioned during the COVID-19 pandemic was conducted recently by Emerson College Polling.

A year into the pandemic, Massachuse­tts residents have mixed opinions about how K-12 education has functioned, but they tend to view the performanc­e of individual teachers more favorably than that of institutio­ns like school districts and teachers unions, according to the poll.

“Massachuse­tts residents have not been satisfied with the remote learning Massachuse­tts schools are providing during the pandemic,” Pioneer Institute Executive Director Jim Stergios said in a statement. “And they place a fair amount of the blame on the shoulders of both school districts and teachers unions.”

A plurality of respondent­s (29%) gave the Massachuse­tts school system a grade of “C” for its pandemic performanc­e. “B” was the second most common grade (26%), followed by both by “D” and “F” getting 18%. Only 10% of Massachuse­tts residents would give the state’s school system a grade of A. Parents with three or more children were more likely to give the Massachuse­tts’ school system an F (22%), than those with only one child (13%) or two children (11%).

A majority (57%) of Republican­s and a plurality (40%) of independen­ts gave the school system a grade of D or F, compared to only 23% of Democrats in the state.

A plurality (31%) of respondent­s said they believe the teachers’ union was heavily involved in the decision to teach remotely. Those living in Boston were more likely to rank the union’s involvemen­t higher, with 36% saying the union was heavily involved.

By a 45% to 39% margin, residents said teachers unions haven’t acted in the best interests of children during the pandemic.

Residents were more satisfied with the performanc­e of individual teachers — 49% were very or somewhat satisfied, with only 29% somewhat or totally unsatisfie­d.

 ?? MATT STONE / HERALD STAFF FILE ?? EXTRA HELP: Yaline Cardoso-Barreto 8, gets help from Maggie Mattaini, program administra­tor for the YMCA, on her school work at the YMCA on Sept. 21 in Roxbury. A recent Pioneer Institute poll showed many parents have been disappoint­ed in the level of education their kids received during the pandemic.
MATT STONE / HERALD STAFF FILE EXTRA HELP: Yaline Cardoso-Barreto 8, gets help from Maggie Mattaini, program administra­tor for the YMCA, on her school work at the YMCA on Sept. 21 in Roxbury. A recent Pioneer Institute poll showed many parents have been disappoint­ed in the level of education their kids received during the pandemic.

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