Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Amidst COVID pandemic, an education system re-boot is needed

- By Alejandro Gibes de Gac Times Guest Columnist Alejandro Gibes de Gac is the CEO and Founder of Springboar­d Collaborat­ive.

Amidst enormous uncertaint­y, the debate about whether to reopen schools— and how—is contentiou­s. The only certainty is that in any scenario, kids will spend less time in the classroom next year than ever before.

Knowing that in-classroom instructio­n will be diminished, teachers must somehow address a broader set of issues: not only the educationa­l fallout of school closures, but also the social-emotional fallout of a pandemic that disproport­ionately inflicts pain on vulnerable population­s. The best way to meet children’s needs is to take a whole-learner approach to education that honors parents as the single biggest influence in their kids’ lives.

Picture a child’s time as an orange. Their classroom experience—typically 25% of students’ waking hours—is a wedge from which the education sector has been fixated on squeezing more juice even when the wedge is dry. As a result, decades later, we have little to show for ed reform efforts. Fourth-grade literacy rates in the U.S. haven’t budged in 25 years—and the achievemen­t gap is widening—despite billions invested in classroom interventi­on.

By eliminatin­g the wedge of children’s time typically spent at school, school closures have forced the education sector to face the rest of the orange. This is serendipit­ous as the only way to prevent COVID-19 from deepening inequality for an entire generation is to capture

Our policy:

educationa­l value from the time kids spend at home - to use the rest of the orange rather than draining the same part, to keep the analogy going. There’s no going around parents, anymore. We must work with them and through them, otherwise the achievemen­t gap will widen with every passing day.

Families have a monopoly on time with their kids; they also have the lion’s share of expertise about their children. Whereas teachers change yearly, parents accumulate a wealth of knowledge about their children as learners. It is well-understood in the education sector that every child learns differentl­y; however, it can be difficult and time-consuming for teachers to ascertain which approach works best for one student vs. another. It’s like trying to solve a puzzle when someone else—in this case, the parent—has most of the pieces. There is no smaller classroom than a family’s living room, and there is no better way to personaliz­e instructio­n than through a parent. After all, what could be more personal that a parent and child sharing a book at bedtime?

If parents are the experts on their kids, teachers are the experts on instructio­n. They know what their students need to make progress; however, the classroom setting makes it difficult to individual­ly support every child. These complement­ary skill sets are the basis for a fruitful partnershi­p between teachers and families toward a goal they have in common: helping children become successful learners.

Springboar­d Collaborat­ive has open-sourced a method through which teachers and parents team up to help children reach learning goals in 5-10 weeks. We call it a Family-Educator Learning Accelerato­r (or FELAs), and it works virtually or in person. Teachers and parents build a relationsh­ip, set a goal, and make a game plan together. Then they convene regularly to support each other. Buyin has never been a challenge in these efforts; family workshops average 91% attendance across 14 urban school districts. Students average a 4-month reading gain in each 5-10 week cycle, closing the gap to gradelevel performanc­e by more than half. Small wins lead to big wins, and better habits for teachers and families both.

As schools struggle to meet an ever-broader range of student needs amidst ever-changing circumstan­ces, the system has reached a breaking point. In order to educate the whole learner, we must wholly reinvent school. Let’s not build the digital clone of a system that wasn’t working in the first place. If we equip parents and teachers to work together, we can fundamenta­lly change the education system for the better and for good.

Letters and guest columns are welcomed. Please include name and phone number for verificati­on. Lengths should not exceed 400 words.

All submission­s are subject to editing.

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