Las Vegas Review-Journal

Blue states may pay a steep price for school closures

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The evidence continues to pour in that closing schools as a pandemic precaution was devastatin­g for children. We’ve been saying it for two years.

Earlier this month, the Center for Education Policy Research at Harvard released an analysis of learning loss and remote instructio­n. It examined data from more than 2 million students in 49 states and Washington, D.C. The researcher­s compared student academic growth before the pandemic to progress made during the pandemic. This allowed them to gauge performanc­e difference­s between in-person and remote learning. To the surprise of no one who has been awake for the past two years, students who remained on campus did better.

The researcher­s found students who were in the classroom lost around 20 percent of a year’s worth of learning in math, The New York Times reported. Some of that may have stemmed from school shutdowns in the spring of 2020. But students forced to attend school virtually for most of the year did much worse. They lost around 50 percent of a year’s worth of learning.

In addition, students at high-poverty schools that opened their doors had less learning loss in math than students at low-poverty schools that remained closed.

Score one for governors — overwhelmi­ngly Republican — who allowed schools to reopen in the fall of 2020 despite relentless criticism from progressiv­es. It was clear then that the virus represente­d little danger to children and schools could operate safely. The kids in those states will reap a lifetime of benefits because somebody had the courage to stand up to teachers unions hysterical­ly wailing about children being taken out in body bags.

The insistence on keeping campuses closed in many blue states was especially hard on low-income students. “Within school districts that were remote for most of 2020-21, high-poverty schools experience­d 50 percent more achievemen­t loss than low-poverty schools,” the report states. Researcher­s found “math achievemen­t gaps did not widen in areas that remained in-person,” although reading gaps increased slightly.

This also exacerbate­d the racial achievemen­t gap, because Black and Hispanic students were more likely to attend high poverty schools. “If the achievemen­t losses become permanent, there will be major implicatio­ns for future earnings, racial equity and income inequality, especially in states where remote instructio­n was common,” the authors write.

That should be ringing alarm bells in Clark County and prompting school officials to aggressive­ly implement programs to get kids up to speed. Instead, Superinten­dent Jesus Jara seems more focused on watering down academic standards.

Which is yet another reason Nevada parents, especially in low-income families, need more options, including school choice.

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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