The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Zoom learning was a failure; keep children in school

- Tom Elias Columnist

The official results of more than a year of full- and part-time Zoom learning are in, and the practice that became almost universal for schoolchil­dren in 2020 has gotten its final grade: F for flop.

Here are a few of the most salient facts that emerge from state data on student performanc­e in the 2020-21 school year that ended last June:

Fewer than 25% of California students took standardiz­ed tests in 2021, one result of the disengagem­ent brought on by scarcity of in-person teaching.

Graduation rates dropped by 1%, with Latinos almost doubling the overall drop and Black student graduation rates falling four times that much.

By the end of the last school year, only 83.6% of students who started high school four years earlier were able to get diplomas. And the younger students were, the worse they fared with Zoom.

Some realities of Zoom learning, mostly done via laptop computers passed out by schools, were obvious long before the figures were in.

Students were less involved than when taught in person. They could simply walk away from their computers and not participat­e in classes, and in millions of cases there would be no one present to steer them back.

Kids could eat all they wanted during class and phones would ring, too, distractin­g them further.

The results of all this were seen in student performanc­es on standardiz­ed tests.

After five years of steady improvemen­t, test scores declined for the least privileged groups, mainly Black and Latino students.

These were the conclusion­s of the Smarter Balanced assessment test scores, even though so many fewer students actually took the tests in 2021.

They were canceled in 2020. The small turnout for the tests probably indicates that only the most involved pupils were included — and scores dropped even for them.

English language arts results fell by 4% from 2019 to 2021, with just 48% meeting or exceeding national standards (another term for passing the test), and by 5% in math, with just 33% meeting or exceeding standards, compared with 38% two years earlier — already a lousy performanc­e.

Pass rates fell by 12% in math and 6% in English language arts testing. The drops were much sharper for Latinos (22% in math, 10% in English) and almost as bad for Blacks (down 9% in math and 7% in English).

In short, Zoom — or distance — learning proved disastrous to the students it was aimed to keep involved through the worst times of the pandemic.

So California’s public schools, already considered a disgrace by many parents and others, grew far worse when students couldn’t attend them in person.

And that was just for kids who can speak English proficient­ly. For the state’s approximat­ely 1.1 million English learners, matters went from bad to worse. Their performanc­e drops were even greater than the overall results for ethnic minorities overall.

All this appalls adults who work to improve the futures of today’s schoolkids.

“(This) has the potential to have life-altering impacts, especially for our youngest (students),” Samantha Tran, managing director for education policy for the Children Now advocacy group, told a reporter.

State officials tried to downplay the disastrous results.

The kids taking the tests, they said, might not have been representa­tive of all California students. In a normal year, they pointed out, 95% of all students must take these tests, but only about one-fourth that number actually did last year.

But this reality indicates the real scores, had the usual number of students been tested, would have been far worse than what was recorded.

For by their very presence, those participat­ing were selecting themselves as more interested than others. And the more interested kids are in school, the better they usually test.

The bottom line is that despite legitimate worries about contagion, schools must stay open if at all possible, or the future of their students — and all California — will be seriously at risk.

Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@ aol.com.

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