Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Pandemic delays early school days

More parents keep kids from preschool and kindergart­en

- By Heather Hollingswo­rth

MISSION, Kan. — Claire Reagan was feeling overwhelme­d as her oldest child’s first day of kindergart­en approached and with a baby on theway. The 5-year-old boy has autism, and she worried he would struggle with juggling inperson and virtual learning, and that she wouldn’t have enough time to give him the help he needs.

So she decided to wait a year before sending him to school.

“I was stressed about everything and then thought ‘Why does he need to start kindergart­en?’ And it was like a weight was lifted,” said Reagan, a 36year- old high school teacher in Olathe, Kansas.

Thousands of parents around the U.S. have made similar decisions, having their children delay or skip kindergart­en because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The

opt outs, combined with huge declines in preschool enrollment, are raising worries about the longterm effects of somuch lost early education.

“If there is a group for which you would be particular­ly concerned, it is these very young students who are not having these foundation­al experience­s,” said Nate Schwartz, a professor at the Annenberg Institute for SchoolRefo­rm at BrownUnive­rsity.

Kindergart­en isn’t required in most states, and

in normal times parents sometimes “red-shirt” children who would be young for their kindergart­en class to given them an extra year of developmen­tal readiness. But enrollment numbers have plunged in many places this fall as parents weigh health concerns and the prospect of helping young children to navigate distance learning while also holding onto their jobs.

In Los Angeles’ public schools, kindergart­en enrollment is down about 6,000 students, or 14%. In

Nashville, Tennessee, public kindergart­en enrollment is down about 1,800 students, or 37%, from last year.

According to a University of Oregon survey conducted in early September with 1,000 parents from around the U.S., including 242 with a child who was supposed to start kindergart­en this fall, 17% of respondent­s said theywere delaying their children’s schooling. Among those, the most frequent reason cited was safety concerns, followed by concerns about managing virtual schooling and other responsibi­lities, according to Philip Fisher, a psychology professor at the university who is leading an effort to measure the effect of the pandemic on young children and their families.

Fisher said the vast majority of parents reported that they were making sure their kids were attending all of their virtual lessons and completing their coursework without the assistance of hired help or other adults, making juggling their ownwork a challenge. He said that parents are overwhelme­d, particular­ly those in low-income communitie­s where schools are more likely to be offering only remote instructio­n.

“We think young kids are likely getting lost in the shuffle,” he said.

Formany young students, the delayed start of primary school follows a disrupted preschool experience. Among preschool-age children, participat­ion rates plummeted in the spring, as programs closed and children stopped attending, according to a report from the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University. The group is planning a follow-up report, but all indication­s are that enrollment hasn’t fully rebounded, said Steven Barnett, senior co-director of the institute.

He said public preschool programs such as Head Start have been “substantia­l equalizers” for lowincome families.

“When that falls apart, parents are not going to be able to fill the gap,” he said. “The people who are dependent on free public education as equalizers can’t make up the difference when left on their own.”

Some parents feel their children may be ready for in-person school but not for virtual school, said Anna Markowitz, an assistant professor of education at the University of California, Los Angeles.

“They are thinking I can’t work and monitor my child’s Zoom schooling. Parents are really in an impossible situation,” she said.

Only 17 states and Washington, D.C., require children to attend kindergart­en, Markowitz said. Parents elsewhere can bypass kindergart­en and just send their children to first grade next fall.

The National Academies of Science, Engineerin­g, and Medicine released a report in July focused on younger children. Its advice was to prioritize the reopening of schools for children in kindergart­en through fifth grade with well-funded safety measures in place. But since the report was released, high rates of community spread have made in-person learning more risky in many communitie­s, turning young learners into virtual learning guinea pigs.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL/AP ?? Claire Reagan plays with her children Abbie, 3, and Evan, 5, at their Kansas home. She is holding her kids out of preschool and kindergart­en, respective­ly.
CHARLIE RIEDEL/AP Claire Reagan plays with her children Abbie, 3, and Evan, 5, at their Kansas home. She is holding her kids out of preschool and kindergart­en, respective­ly.

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