The Oklahoman

Who can afford remote learning?

Some in Chicago weigh luxury of hiring tutors

- Grace Hauck

CHICAGO – Millions of parents across the nation are facing difficult decisions about what to do with their kids this school year. But the pandemic affects every family differently, for reasons that range from their socioecono­mic status to their health to the fields they work in.

Some parents are in a better position than others to ensure their children stay healthy and keep up with schoolwork, and researcher­s are raising questions about how the pandemic may exacerbate existing educationa­l inequaliti­es. “Kids who are disproport­ionately low-income are at highest risk for learning losses,” said Ariel Kalil, a professor at the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy. “When these gaps in learning open up, absent some really serious and sustained interventi­on, the kids won’t (catch up). That will result in less academic achievemen­t, lower lifetime earnings and even lower productivi­ty in adulthood.”

USA TODAY spoke with more than a dozen families from neighborho­ods across Chicago, and many agreed: It’s not safe to send kids back yet. But some parents can afford to hire personal tutors and buy new learning materials for their kids while they stay home from school. Others – in a city where 270,000 public school students are on free or reduced-price lunch and an estimated 100,000 lack access to high-speed internet – are more concerned about simply obtaining the tools needed to make online learning possible.

While most of the largest school districts in the U.S. have decided to start fully online, Chicago so far is planning a hybrid in-person and at-home learning model, with the option to go fully remote. The hybrid plan assigns students to “pods” of about 15 for in-person learning, which would take place two days a week for most students.

The other days would be used for e-learning. As parents weigh options for the coming school year, city officials are gathering opinions from families in a citywide survey and series of community meetings. The district said Tuesday that it did not yet know how many students would opt for fully remote classes. Class is scheduled to start Sept. 8.

‘You can’t fall behind’

Many parents living in more affluent neighborho­ods said they were closely tracking the coronaviru­s spread in the city and didn’t yet feel comfortabl­e with sending their children back to school.

Some, concerned about their children falling behind and wanting to be able to maintain jobs without much interrupti­on, plan to hire child care or tutoring help. West Side resident Jeremy Sutton said he and his wife would consider sending their 5-year-old son back to school for the two in-person instructio­n days, but they are looking into forming a cohort of other students from his 15-person pod to get together on their elearning days.

“My thought was, ‘Could we find a few other families to do some sort of group?’ If we can’t have school in a classroom safely ... maybe we could get three to five kids together and hire somebody to facilitate,” Sutton said.

“That would be not as good as being in class, (but) that would be better than nothing.” Sutton, a money manager, and his wife, a real estate attorney, are working from home full time, and work is almost as busy as it has ever been, Sutton said. They lasted about two weeks into the shutdown before hiring a child care profession­al to work with their son about five hours a day. “I’m very conscious of the fact that we are able to do this, and not everybody can.

And that’s not really fair and will make problems that are already problems worse,” said Sutton, who formerly served on the board of an education organizati­on in Chicago. “If everybody was going to lose a year at the same time, then that’s fine.

The worry is that this isn’t going to happen evenly, and that’s the problem.” North Side resident Michael Hoffman, vice president of managed care for a laboratory, has two daughters heading into third and 10th grade.

Hoffman said he’s not comfortabl­e sending them back to school because he’s not seeing enough coronaviru­s testing in the city. But he’s concerned about his youngest daughter falling behind and losing her chance of getting into the kind of select high school his older daughter now attends.

For now, he’s working from home, and he can help her with schoolwork. (Hoffman splits childcare 50-50 with his ex-wife.)

If his job becomes more demanding, he plans to hire a tutor. “Especially in Chicago, you can’t fall behind. You just can’t if you want to get into the select schools,”

Hoffman said. In neighborho­ods with more low-income families and people of color, home to many front-line workers, parents were also hesitant about sending their kids back to school. Many said they knew people who had died from COVID-19.

But for most of these parents, hiring a tutor isn’t a part of the equation.

‘It’s kind of scary’

West Side resident Michele Urbina, a single mom who works security at a public school and is in remission for cancer, said she wasn’t ready to send her 14-year-old daughter to school. Urbina said two of her cousins – a postal worker and a medical assistant – have had COVID-19, and her uncle recently died from the disease.

“With how the numbers have started to rise again, and the number of cases that are reported daily now, it’s kind of scary,” Urbina said. Donicia Young, who has four kids and works at a day care center, said she’s not planning to send her kids to school and has set up a learning area for her kids at home.

Contractin­g the virus is a top concern, Young said. Two family members recently died from COVID-19, and her 16-year-old son has asthma, Young said. “I can’t take any chances with him,” Young said. West Side resident Yarimar Nieves said she isn’t in a position to hire a tutor but has been doing her best to help her kids with online learning.

She and her husband, who works as a window washer, have two sons, 10 and 11, who rely on lunches provided by their school.

Nieves said the boys have been keeping up with online summer school by sharing a school-provided laptop – one of the more than 100,000 laptops and tablets distribute­d by the district. “My biggest concern is safety. That is always going to be my No. 1 thing in my head,” Nieves said.

At home with the kids

For some parents, online learning hasn’t been too frustratin­g thus far. They’ve been able to supplement learning or get extra time with their kids.

South Side resident Kevin Robinson, who manages civilian constructi­on projects and is a union member, said he’s grateful his work has given him some flexibility to step away and do things with the kids – two girls, 8 and 6, and two twins boys, 4 – during the day.

He and his wife won’t be sending their kids back to school because the risk of transmissi­on is “too dangerous,” he said.

“I’m not as worried about the academic side of it. We’ve been buying them books, watching PBS with them, talking to them,” Robinson said.

“I’m more concerned about the social side of it. They’re missing out on childhood experience­s.”

Parents weigh tough choice

Many parents expressed concerns about their children’s mental health and social skills but said the risks of contractin­g or spreading the virus outweighed the benefits of going back to school. South Side resident Shawn Rogers argued otherwise.

Rogers said he’s not in a position to help his kids with school during the day. Rogers was working as the manager of a French dining restaurant when it closed down because of the pandemic, and now he’s working six days a week cleaning carpets.

Rogers said he’s not too concerned about coordinati­ng child care – he’s used to working that out with his exwife – but he wants his two sons, 6 and 8, to go back to school so they can continue to socialize with other kids. “They can learn a lot from me, but they need to learn a lot from the community.

They need to see other people in action,” Rogers said. All parents agreed: Whatever preliminar­y plan they set up for their kids will likely change as the pandemic in Chicago continues to evolve.

“I feel like parents, teachers, everyone – we’re choosing between three or four really crappy choices, and we’re trying to make the choice that will hurt the fewest people,” said Jenny Ludwig, who lives on the North Side with two kids, 7 and 4, and her husband, a public school teacher.

“Everyone I know would agree that it’s an impossible choice.”

 ?? JASPER COLT/USA TODAY ?? Profession­al mentor Rakim Isaacs, left, assists Landon Rodriguez in a reading exercise at Friends of the Children. Rodriguez needs extra help due to his dyslexia diagnosis, but he is unable to get it at the public school he attends.
JASPER COLT/USA TODAY Profession­al mentor Rakim Isaacs, left, assists Landon Rodriguez in a reading exercise at Friends of the Children. Rodriguez needs extra help due to his dyslexia diagnosis, but he is unable to get it at the public school he attends.

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