USA TODAY International Edition

Time to change the public school system

Face the pandemic by reimaginin­g classroom

- Arne Duncan and Rey Saldaña Arne Duncan is managing partner at Chicago CRED and author of “How Schools Work.” He served as U. S. secretary of education. Rey Saldaña is president of Communitie­s In Schools.

As an unpreceden­ted academic year grinds to an end, with schools shuttered and millions of children learning remotely, education leaders face the task of preparing for reopening with no end to the pandemic in sight.

Back to school will not be back to normal. But neither should it be a return to business as usual.

As we embark on our nationwide effort to reenter school buildings, we must determine not just how far apart desks need to be, whether attendance should be staggered and how often to sanitize facilities. We must also ask how we can build an education system that gives every child in every community the opportunit­y to learn and succeed. A system better than the one we left behind before COVID- 19 and before George Floyd’s horrific death at the hands of Minneapoli­s police catalyzed protest across the nation against injustice and structural inequality.

A moment when we are experienci­ng a national health emergency and nationwide discontent may seem like the wrong time to propose a bold new direction in American public education. But the coronaviru­s has changed everything, and the Floyd protests have shone a light on inequity.

The only way to adequately respond to both moments is to transform K– 12 learning for good. Doing so will require a significant federal investment in education. The costs will certainly be high, but the long- term price of inaction will be even higher.

An utter lack of leadership and guidance from Washington on how states and school districts should move forward with the virus continuing to circulate is a hurdle. But local leaders across America have shown boundless creativity in the months since schools started closing their doors. They’ve done their best to find new ways to educate, feed, and support students and stay connected to families.

Now, we must move beyond shortterm solutions. Any path forward must address extended learning loss among students caused by necessary spring school closures — what experts are calling the “COVID slide” — and avoid it if future rolling shutdowns are necessary. A solid plan for the future must also deal with the ways the coronaviru­s has exacerbate­d longstandi­ng educationa­l inequities experience­d by many vulnerable children, including poor students and many students of color.

There won’t be one solution, but rather a combinatio­n of approaches. Here are some of the evidence- backed principles around which we can reimagine a more just public education:

❚ The school calendar is an obsolete notion. Children are now so far behind — likely a third of a year behind in reading and half a year in math — we can’t wait for fall to help them catch up. Academic recovery has to start now. Summer programs should be offered multiple years. With a possibilit­y that the coronaviru­s will be with us for years to come, school districts should consider a year- round academic calendar.

❚ Education can be personaliz­ed. Schools will likely not be able to welcome all children back at once — or at all — in the fall. Schools need to make an individual­ized education plan for every student that takes academic and social- emotional needs into account. Students with the highest academic and social needs will need more faceto- face time. Out of necessity, many school districts will limit class size to reduce the risk of infection; that can also help us focus on grouping children in ways that best suit learning styles.

❚ Competency matters, not seat time. We need to rethink how we expect kids to learn and how we evaluate them. For example, Cleveland’s school district has proposed grouping learners in bands of grades, rather than assigning a single grade level. That’s how many preschools operate, advancing children when they’re ready. Competency- based teaching will be helpful not only to deal with the COVID slide but also natural differences in learning between children and gaps caused by racial and income disparitie­s.

❚ Supporting students’ non- academic needs is necessary, not “niceto- have.” The national education nonprofit Communitie­s In Schools estimates that for $ 5 billion to $ 7 billion a year, we could invest in individual­ized case management for every child in Title 1 school and support their non- academic needs. That’s a drop in the bucket compared to what we spend on broken systems like policing. These integrated supports could be coordinate­d by a staffer from the school district or a local nonprofit. Either way, critical student services such as physical and mental health, housing and food enable kids to learn to their full ability. These services will be even more critical in the coming months, with high unemployme­nt and economic uncertaint­y.

These kinds of systemwide changes will require deep investment in human capital, technology and infrastruc­ture. Many local budgets have been strained by the coronaviru­s and the protests, and local and state sales taxes are sure to be down next year. School districts will surely be forced to make steep cuts. Absent a federal stimulus package to make up for the shortfall, and fund the additional needs, the effects on local schools will be devastatin­g.

Even in a pandemic, our nation’s leaders have the chance to improve education for today’s children and generation­s to come. They should seize it.

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