The Mercury News

Take it from me, kids suffer from being taught at home

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2021 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

This is guaranteed: Many kids locked out of classrooms by the pandemic will suffer academical­ly from being forced to learn at home.

It doesn’t matter what the politician­s say — the governor, legislator­s, superinten­dents, school board members and teachers union leaders. They must not fully grasp the extent of the potential harm to homebound students.

I’m no education expert, even if my late wife did teach high school English for 38 years. But I know what I personally experience­d. And reading these days about the problems of students trying to learn at home triggers bad memories.

I was stuck at home my entire freshman year in high school because of a physical ailment. Fortunatel­y, no impersonal Zoom existed in those ancient times. A live teacher — a very nice woman — showed up a few hours each day to run through my algebra, English and other ninth grade lessons.

My mind constantly wandered. Thoughts were on sports, fishing and my illness. I couldn’t wait for the short “school day” to end.

Homework was done haphazardl­y, if at all. I got away with stuff I never would have at a real school.

Does any of this seem familiar, parents?

My academic abilities declined. Why? Not sure. Lack of personal contact with other kids and classroom teachers? No peer competitio­n? Maybe I forgot how to study.

I had previously always gotten top grades — mostly A’s with a few B’s in junior high, and excellent marks in elementary school. But after reentering high school as a sophomore, I became mostly a B and C student. And that’s the way it stayed through college, except for courses I really cared about, such as journalism.

So, parents be forewarned: Many kids will slip scholastic­ally.

“I’ve seen it firsthand,” Gov. Gavin Newsom told reporters Friday, talking about distance learning difficulti­es for his 4-year-old son, Dutch.

Actually, three of Newsom’s four children have had problems with Zoom learning, according to Daniel Lopez, the governor’s press secretary. But since late fall, they’ve been attending private schools and sitting in real classrooms.

Another politician who has observed boring in-home learning up close is Assemblyma­n Phil Ting, D-San Francisco, chairman of that house’s budget committee. And he’s alarmed.

“Parents like myself have been watching their kids on Zoom for the last year, and the learning loss is absolutely staggering,” Ting told reporters.

But Newsom and Ting can’t agree on the best, quickest way to reopen schools. Newsom originally proposed a $2 billion back-to-school plan for lower elementary students and set a mid-February target for classroom reopening. It needed legislativ­e approval and failed.

The teachers unions objected to Newsom’s proposal. And most Democratic legislator­s won’t buck the unions — particular­ly the California Teachers Associatio­n — because their campaign endorsemen­ts and money are gold at election time.

Teachers insisted on being vaccinated first. That’s understand­able. An annual profession­al hazard is catching colds from kids. But young children are at very low risk of being infected by the coronaviru­s and passing it on to others, data show.

Anyway, there wasn’t enough vaccine, Newsom insisted. And teachers were behind health care workers and 65-year-olds on the priority list.

Ting and Democratic legislator­s last week introduced their own plan, a $6.6 billion proposal to open elementary schools by April 15. That would provide more time for bargaining between unions and school districts.

Under the legislatio­n, counties would be required to offer vaccinatio­ns to teachers and all campus staff. But the bill doesn’t specifical­ly require that shots be provided before classrooms reopen.

Newsom has indicated that he’ll veto the measure if it passes the Legislatur­e.

“We would be, if we adopted that proposal, an extreme outlier” among the states, Newsom said. “I can’t support something that’s going to delay the safe reopening of schools for our youngest kids.”

The governor countered by announcing he’ll set aside for teachers 10% of California’s weekly vaccine allotment starting March 1.

Similar stubborn squabbles are taking place between school districts and teachers unions all over California, including in Los Angeles.

The longer students are confined to home learning, the more they’ll decline academical­ly. I know that for a fact.

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