Chattanooga Times Free Press

Schools across U.S. brace for enrollment surge

- BY HEATHER HOLLINGSWO­RTH AND CEDAR ATTANASIO

School districts across the United States are hiring additional teachers in anticipati­on of what will be one of the largest kindergart­en classes ever as enrollment rebounds following the coronaviru­s pandemic.

As they await the arrival next fall of students who sat out the current school year, educators are also bracing for many students to be less prepared than usual due to lower preschool attendance rates.

“The job of the kindergart­en teacher just got a lot harder,” said Steven Barnett, senior co-director of the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University. He coauthored a report that found the number of 4-year-olds participat­ing in preschool fell from 71% before the pandemic to 54% during the pandemic, with poor children much less likely to attend in-person.

Kindergart­en is not required in most states, and in normal times, parents sometimes “red-shirt” children who would be young for their kindergart­en class to give them an extra year of developmen­tal readiness. This year, even children nowhere near the cutoff

age were held out of school because of health concerns and the disruption­s caused by the pandemic.

Among them was the daughter of Christina Neu, who held her back even though her daughter has a December birthday and already would be relatively old for her class because the entry cutoff is the end of August. Across Kansas, kindergart­en enrollment fell by nearly 9%.

“There was a little bit of fear, not wanting her to have to deal with kind of an unknown there,” Neu said, adding that her eldest daughter, who is 8, had just been diagnosed before the pandemic with 26 different food allergies and her immune system already was in overdrive. “We wanted to make sure that as a family we were being smart and being safe.”

Neu, who works in retail in Wichita, Kansas, cooked with her daughters, bought educationa­l workbooks and played educationa­l games with them. She said she has no regrets but is apprehensi­ve about the burden facing kindergart­en teachers.

“I would be really concerned about stress and just the teacher getting everything done with a big class,” she said.

With large amounts of federal relief money available, school districts are taking a range of approaches to prepare.

In Orange County, Florida, there are estimates that the incoming kindergart­en class will be 17% bigger than in fall 2020 and officials are planning a 5 1/2 week transition program this summer at some of its neediest schools.

In Minnesota, the St. Paul district is anticipati­ng nearly 22% more kindergart­ners than in fall 2020. The district plans to do testing over the summer to identify any special needs that have been missed, such as vision problems and speech delays, said Lori Erickson, a veteran kindergart­en teacher who now coordinate­s the district’s pre-kindergart­en program.

She said the district also just learned it is getting more money to expand its jumpstart to kindergart­en summer program, which will include a field trip to a strawberry patch and visits from a dancer and painter.

“The biggest thing on our radar is recognizin­g the trauma that has happened,” she said, adding that the district has various staffers “who are ready to rumble.”

It remains uncertain just how big kindergart­en classes will be in the fall. The increase could be offset by parents who decide to wait an extra year to send 5-year-olds or opt for homeschool­ing because of safety concerns.

Regardless, education leaders say they expect to be addressing the effects of the pandemic for years.

Albuquerqu­e Public Schools Superinten­dent Scott Elder said children who skipped kindergart­en or were homeschool­ed last year may be a bit behind on their numbers and letters. The same goes for the kids who were enrolled and studied online, but couldn’t always connect or get support from parents.

“When people talk about learning loss and kids being behind, it won’t be a quick solution. That’s going to be a multi-year solution, but it will be solved,” Elder said.

In Connecticu­t, some school districts are targeting summer programs at incoming kindergart­ners who missed out on preschool. Irene Parisi, the state’s chief academic officer, said in an interview that districts are also using federal relief money to add staff to help out and training them that they need to adjust their expectatio­ns.

“It is important that teachers realize that the routines are going to be different than perhaps what you may have expected of learners in the past,” she said.

In the 900-student Freeman School District in Rockford, Washington, Superinten­dent Randy Russell just hired a new teacher as the district prepares to add a third kindergart­en class. He said about one-third of the preschoole­rs and kindergart­eners in the mostly rural district about 15 miles south of Spokane skipped this school year and that other districts around the region experience­d similar drops.

But the upcoming school year has him encouraged: “Even if you do have a gap, it is going to be closed pretty quickly. We are just excited that we are going to get the kids back.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/MARY ALTAFFER ?? Kindergart­en students wear masks and are separated by plastic glass during a math lesson at the Milton Elementary School, in Rye, N.Y.
AP FILE PHOTO/MARY ALTAFFER Kindergart­en students wear masks and are separated by plastic glass during a math lesson at the Milton Elementary School, in Rye, N.Y.
 ?? CHRISTINA NEU VIA AP ?? Christina Neu works on a puzzle with her six-year-old daughter Charissa last Wednesday in Wichita, Kan. Neu didn’t enroll Charissa in kindergart­en last fall even though she would have been one of the older kids in her class because of concerns about the pandemic.
CHRISTINA NEU VIA AP Christina Neu works on a puzzle with her six-year-old daughter Charissa last Wednesday in Wichita, Kan. Neu didn’t enroll Charissa in kindergart­en last fall even though she would have been one of the older kids in her class because of concerns about the pandemic.

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