Chicago Sun-Times

LEARNING LIMITED IN CPS HOMES

Less than 60% of district’s students are logging on for online classes most days, according to new data

- BY NADER ISSA, EDUCATION REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa

Newly released and long-awaited data from the nation’s third-largest school system shows what many have suspected: In the best circumstan­ces, remote learning has been an uneven and dubious replacemen­t for in-person instructio­n; and in the worst, it has left students entirely disconnect­ed from their teachers.

Fewer than 60% of all Chicago Public Schools students are engaging with online remote learning three or more days per week, data unveiled Wednesday shows. Vulnerable population­s, such as kids who are homeless and black and Latino students whose families have been disproport­ionately hurt by the coronaviru­s pandemic, are logging on at lower rates. Tens of thousands of students aren’t being reached by their schools at all despite computer and internet access having largely been achieved.

The report, which includes some of the most detailed metrics in the country, measures 294,000 students at district-run schools and focuses on the week of May 11, the most recently measured time span which also saw the best engagement thus far. Officials said they don’t have access to data for another 60,000 kids who attend charters.

The data shows about 85% of students were successful­ly contacted by someone at their school at least once the week of May 11, whether to check in for academic reasons or to offer social and emotional support. But more than 43,000 students, including a quarter of all high schoolers, weren’t reached that week. Since schools closed, 2,200 students haven’t been reached a single time.

District: Data shows growth

“As an educator, I want to see all kids engaged,” CPS Chief Education Officer LaTanya McDade said in an interview. “Ultimately that’s what I would love to see. But I know that remote learning is not perfect. So my expectatio­n was growth.”

McDade said her goal has been to find population­s that aren’t seeing week-overweek improvemen­ts so CPS officials can use those metrics to identify where to focus their efforts.

Engagement has steadily risen since remote learning started the week of March 13, when slightly less than half the district logged on three or more days that week.

But the effort to bridge the so-called “digital

divide” during that time hasn’t necessaril­y translated to online learning for all students.

District officials said 93% of students now have digital access, including a laptop and internet connection, after more than 100,000 laptops and tablets were passed out. That’s no small accomplish­ment since mid-April, when one in three students started remote learning without a computer. At least 15,600 are still learning using paper homework packets, the district said.

Yet 58,000 kids, about a quarter of all students, didn’t log on to a Google digital learning site — the platform used in the vast majority of CPS schools — at all the week of

May 11.

Many of those who did log in engaged consistent­ly: More than two-thirds of the 116,000 kids in fourth through eighth grades signed on to Google Classroom or Google Meet at least three times the week of May 11. Those grades were the most engaged in the district.

High school students and first and second graders drove down those totals, with only about half of high schoolers logging on three or more times the week of May 11. Seniors, by far, engaged at the lowest rate.

Preschoole­rs and kindergart­ners were not included in those figures because very few have CPS login credential­s. And the district said there are an unidentifi­ed number of students engaged yet not captured by this data because their schools are using online learning platforms other than Google, making engagement there more difficult to track.

So when CPS officials presented the data to the Board of Education at its monthly meeting Wednesday, board vice president Sendhil Revuluri asked whether engagement in reality is better or worse than these numbers show.

Shannon Heston, a CPS administra­tor, said engagement “is probably a bit higher” in some cases and “a bit lower” in others than the data shows, especially because of the use of platforms that aren’t tracked. But she acknowledg­ed the district wants to see more engagement than just once per week, for example.

“We need to go deeper in order to understand more,” she said.

Inequities affecting students of color

Black and Latino students, who combined make up 83% of the district, have engaged at lower rates than other groups, CPS figures show. Slightly more than 70% of black students logged on at least once the week of

May 11, while 78.2% of Latino students did. By comparison 87% of white and Asian children went online to learn.

Several social and educationa­l inequities might be contributi­ng to those discrepanc­ies.

Students of color primarily made up population­s who didn’t have computer or internet access going into the pandemic, such as those who are homeless or come from lowincome families.

Studies have also shown people of color largely have been the ones working jobs classified as “essential,” meaning those parents might not always be home with their children to help with remote learning.

McDade said it was “dishearten­ing but not surprising” to see those factors contribute to lower rates of engagement among students of color.

“When you look at communitie­s of color and how the pandemic has disproport­ionately impacted communitie­s of color, which is the majority of our students, you’re also seeing that play out in the data,” McDade said.

Fewer than two-thirds of homeless students have been online at all. Special education students and English learners have logged on at slightly higher rates.

Board member Lucino Sotelo said difficult life circumstan­ces for lots of families are leading to lower engagement.

“There are real situations where both parents are working, they want the best for their children, they’re trying their hardest,” Sotelo said. “Now you have other children acting as parents at home, as well. So there’s a lot of dynamics, and the empathy and work the teachers are demonstrat­ing through this whole process is tremendous­ly appreciate­d.”

Teachers express frustratio­n

A third-grade teacher at a Southwest Side school, who asked to remain anonymous to speak candidly about her experience, said some of her best students are no longer completing all their work. Half her class of 27 students is engaged daily, and another 10 are online at least three days a week. A few have been really difficult to reach.

“I don’t know how to get more kids engaged,” the teacher said. “In school, we have rewards and things, and you would just miss out on those. And also [there was] the peer pressure of, ‘All my friends around me are doing their math worksheet, let me go ahead and do mine, too.’”

A mother of a young child herself, the teacher said stress levels have reached a boiling point. She’s doing more work to stay connected with students — while feeling she doesn’t have enough time to help with her own kid’s learning — with seemingly less of an impact on kids.

“We’re stressed out too, it’s not just the kids who are in these situations,” the teacher said. “I’m fatigued too.”

Another educator, a first-grade teacher at a West Side school, said only about half her students are engaged to the degree they were before remote learning began. She said she’s been going easy on grading on last week’s progress reports to give kids credit for trying.

“My grades ended up high, but I was exceedingl­y generous, and basically gave a kid a ‘C’ if they’d turned in any assignment for a given content area. I’m not sure other people were as lenient.”

 ?? NAM Y. HUH/AP ?? Olivia Marton, a junior at Lincoln Park High School, does schoolwork at her Chicago home in March.
NAM Y. HUH/AP Olivia Marton, a junior at Lincoln Park High School, does schoolwork at her Chicago home in March.
 ?? NAM Y.HUH/AP (ABOVE); PROVIDED (LEFT) ?? ABOVE: Sarah Marton (left) with her son Cooper Marton, an eighth grader at Disney II Magnet School, while he studies at home in Chicago in March. LEFT: Allegra Coleman (left), a student at Lane Tech High School, studies at her South Shore home with her brother, Alexandré, a student at private De La Salle Institute, in March.
NAM Y.HUH/AP (ABOVE); PROVIDED (LEFT) ABOVE: Sarah Marton (left) with her son Cooper Marton, an eighth grader at Disney II Magnet School, while he studies at home in Chicago in March. LEFT: Allegra Coleman (left), a student at Lane Tech High School, studies at her South Shore home with her brother, Alexandré, a student at private De La Salle Institute, in March.
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