Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Tallying the toll of union school closures

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The teachers union school shutdowns last year will have devastatin­g long-term national effects. A new report reveals the sobering details and should be an impetus for much-needed reform.

“The fallout from the pandemic,” write analysts with McKinsey and Company, a nearly 100-year-old global management consulting firm, “threatens to depress this generation’s prospects and constrict their opportunit­ies far into adulthood. The ripple effects may undermine their chances of attending college and ultimately finding a fulfilling job that enables them to support a family.”

This lost year, the study found, could cost students as much as $61,000 in lifetime earnings, while hampering the U.S. economy by up to $188 billion for “every year this cohort enters the workforce.”

According to the researcher­s, remote instructio­n was an utter failure leading to significan­t learning gaps — on average, students fell five months behind in math and four months behind in reading. Considerin­g that nearly three-quarters of incoming ninth graders in the Clark County School District already fail to achieve proficienc­y in those vital areas, online learning has only exacerbate­d the district’s struggles.

The primary victims of the school closures, as suspected, are the disadvanta­ged. Learning gaps for Black and low-income students exceeded the average. “High schoolers have become more likely to drop out of school,” the report found, “and high school seniors, especially those from low-income families, are less likely to go on to post-secondary education.”

But the toll imposed by the union school closures was more than academic. A McKinsey survey revealed that “roughly 80 percent of parents had some level of concern about their child’s mental health or social and emotional health and developmen­t since the pandemic began” and that “unaddresse­d mental-health challenges will likely have a knock-on effect on academics going forward as well.”

Through various pandemic relief bills, the federal government has provided about $200 billion to U.S. school districts over the next three years to address moving forward from school closures. A state legislativ­e committee in February directed nearly $346 million in relief cash to the Clark County district, but officials have yet to determine the specifics of how it will be spent. That will be of little solace to the juniors or seniors who lost ground while trying to learn remotely.

Money has rarely proved to be the magic elixir that the education establishm­ent insists. But if these federal funds are directed toward programs that help students catch up academical­ly and fortify their emotional well-being, they might successful­ly mitigate the damage caused by the union shutdowns. The district must also avoid building these one-shot funds into baseline budgets.

In addition, if the pandemic’s educationa­l carnage has proven anything, it’s that parents — particular­ly those of lesser means — need more options for their children. Whether it’s acknowledg­ing the value of school choice, the necessity of creative charter schools or the possibilit­y of home-schooling, “we have learned in the pandemic that some of the innovation­s born of necessity met some families’ needs better,” the McKinsey report concludes. Encouragin­g the developmen­t of such alternativ­es is perhaps the most promising path forward when it comes to undoing the destructio­n caused by unnecessar­y teachers union school closures.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-Journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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