Nat Malkus – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Tue, 12 Dec 2023 02:43:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Nat Malkus – 社区黑料 32 32 Rose-Colored Recovery: Study Says Parents Don鈥檛 Grasp Scope of Learning Loss /article/a-rose-colored-recovery-study-says-parents-dont-grasp-extent-of-covids-academic-damage/ Mon, 11 Dec 2023 05:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=719073 Last week, as leading education experts gathered 鈥 again 鈥攖o ponder the nation鈥檚 sluggish recovery from pandemic learning loss, one speaker put the issue in stark relief. 

鈥淭his is the biggest problem facing America,鈥 Jens Ludwig, a University of Chicago professor, said flatly. Nonetheless, he told those assembled at the Washington, D.C., event sponsored by the , a think tank, 鈥淲e do not have our hair on fire the way it needs to be.鈥

Education experts gathered in Washington last week to discuss pandemic learning loss. From left, Jens Ludwig from the University of Chicago, Nat Malkus of the American Enterprise Institute, T. Nakia Towns of Accelerate and Melissa Kearney of the Aspen Institute. (Aspen Institute)

That disconnect is the subject of a new released Monday that further explores what many have labeled an 鈥urgency gap.鈥 To pinpoint the extent of the gap, the authors talked to parents about the signals they鈥檙e getting from teachers and schools about their children鈥檚 progress. Parents expressed little concern about lasting damage from the pandemic and typically thought their children were doing well in school 鈥 a view that researchers say is belied by dismal state and national test scores. 

The issue is 鈥済enuinely vexing,鈥 said Morgan Polikoff, an associate education professor at the University of Southern California and the paper鈥檚 lead author.  

鈥淧arents are overwhelmingly getting the message from grades and teachers that kids are doing fine-to-great,鈥 he said. He attributes that upbeat outlook to how little parents pay attention to standardized test scores 鈥 the 鈥渆xternal measures鈥 that matter most to researchers. 鈥淲e just never heard anything about standardized tests from the folks we interviewed.鈥

Parents鈥 concern about their children鈥檚 performance has dropped considerably since 2021 despite researchers鈥 warnings about the long-term effects of the pandemic. (University of Southern California)

The 2022 National Assessment of Educational Progress showed historic declines in math and flat performance in reading. According to this year鈥檚 spring test results, pandemic recovery remains elusive for some states. Several have continued to lose ground in reading and most have not surpassed pre-COVID performance in math. Last week鈥檚 release of international scores show U.S. students dropped 13 points in math between 2018 and 2022. 

Ludwig argues that U.S. students have made such little progress that the $190 billion Congress appropriated to address the COVID crisis is insufficient and lawmakers should find to fund high-dosage tutoring.  

鈥淚f we don’t remediate this pandemic learning loss, this cohort of 50 million kids will experience reduced lifetime earnings of something like $900 billion,鈥 he said.

Those messages, however, don鈥檛 always get to parents. 

Given the gauntlet of tests schools administer, it鈥檚 easy for parents to get lost, said Meredith Dodson, executive director of San Francisco Parent Action, a group that advocated for schools to reopen and has recently pushed for improvements in the district鈥檚 reading program.

For many parents, 鈥溾嬧媔t’s hard to understand all the acronyms 鈥 this test versus that test, the state versus the national,鈥 she said. 鈥淧arents just really want to trust their teachers. Is my kid on grade level or not?鈥

Even some parents who knew their children鈥檚 standardized test scores tended to put more stock in grades, Polikoff found. One parent interviewed for the study knew that a majority of students scored higher than her son on the NWEA MAP test in math. But, she said, 鈥渉is knowledge is much greater than that鈥 because he received a 3 on a scale of 1-3 on his report card, which 鈥渕eans they鈥檝e achieved the mastery or whatever.鈥 

Researchers have documented  between grade point averages and , especially since the pandemic. from three organizations 鈥 EdNavigator, Learning Heroes and TNTP 鈥 showed an increase in B grades since the pandemic even among students who performed below grade level and were chronically absent.

District A is smaller with an above-average student achievement rate. District B is larger with achievement levels around the national average. In both, students are more likely than they were in 2019 to earn a B, despite scoring below grade level and missing more than 10% of the school year. (EdNavigator, Learning Heroes and TNTP)

鈥楰ids are not stupid鈥

Schools have also made it easier to do well, a vestige of pandemic-era incentives to get students to complete their work. Dan Goldhaber, director of the CALDER Center at the American Institutes for Research 鈥 and the father of two school-age children 鈥 said he鈥檚 increasingly 鈥渁stounded鈥 at how many chances students get to bring up their grades.

鈥淜ids are not stupid,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey’re going to learn that, 鈥楴o, I don’t need to study real hard for this test because I can just correct it after the fact.鈥”

It鈥檚 not a surprise, he added, that there鈥檚 been a lackluster response to some academic recovery efforts. A lot of districts have spent relief funds on less-effective remediation efforts, such as optional on-demand tutoring. And those companies typically get paid whether or not students improve or even use the service, according to . 

In response to disappointing results, some states and districts have shifted course. A few have with large online tutoring companies. Some have turned to 鈥渙utcomes-based鈥 contracts 鈥 in which tutors earn more money for better results. But others are sticking with . 

If districts are going to spend funds on tutoring, Goldhaber said, officials should 鈥渉ave some control over鈥 which students receive the help and when it鈥檚 delivered.

He and Polikoff are among the experts urging educators to make test score data a much larger focus of their conversations with parents. And there鈥檚 some evidence that hard facts about students鈥 scores can be a wake-up call.

A November showed that among parents who knew their children were below grade level in math, improving those skills became their number one concern, more important than curbing the effects of social media and protecting them from bullies.

Being honest with parents starts at the top, said Nat Malkus, deputy director of Education Policy Studies at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. 

鈥淪uperintendents should not say, 鈥榃e鈥檙e chugging along. We’re going to get there.鈥 They should say this is a huge problem,鈥 he said at the Aspen event. Teachers, he added, need 鈥減olitical cover鈥 to tell parents their children are behind. 鈥淚t’s the truth and we need to deliver it.鈥 

Precious Allen, a Chicago charter school teacher, said parents can get 鈥渇lustered鈥 when they learn their children are below grade level. She started sharing research to help them understand how the pandemic threw their kids off track. (Courtesy of Precious Allen)

But the news doesn鈥檛 always go over well. When Precious Allen, who teaches second grade at Betty Shabazz Academy, a charter school in Chicago, showed parents test results that indicated their children were a year or more behind, she said they grew 鈥渇lustered鈥 and complained about doing extra review sheets with their children after work. 

It was tough, she said, for them to 鈥渨rap their minds around鈥 the data. She shared passages from that explains where children should be for their age to help parents understand how the pandemic threw their kids off track. 鈥淚 had to bring a lot of science and research into it because sometimes the voice of a teacher is not enough.鈥

鈥榃orst possible time鈥

But not all educators believe assessments provide valuable or reliable information. Polikoff sees the separation between parents and the nation鈥檚 education scholars as part of a larger anti-testing movement that started brewing long . The pandemic pause on state assessments and accountability sparked a to limit the number of tests and try .

The Massachusetts Teachers Association, for example, is leading a to remove the state test as a graduation requirement, calling it 鈥渉armful.鈥 The proposal drew sharp criticism from National Parents Association President Keri Rodrigues, whose organization trains parents to advocate for quality education.

鈥淭his is the dawn of a new era, where high school diplomas now become participation trophies,鈥 she wrote in an . 

Testing critics complain that assessments take up too much instructional time and that the results rarely benefit teachers because they arrive after students have already moved on to the next grade. Others say high-stakes tests are racially biased against Black and Hispanic students. 

鈥淭here鈥檚 just very close to zero constituencies advocating for tests or that they matter,鈥 Polikoff said. Republicans, he said, 鈥渨ant only unfettered choice鈥 while the left is not defending the usefulness of tests 鈥渢o ensure educational quality or equity.鈥

鈥橳he backlash against testing, he said, has come “at the worst possible time given the damage that鈥檚 actually been done.”

]]>
Pandemic-Related School Closures Fueled Enrollment Exodus, Report Finds /article/pandemic-related-school-closures-fueled-enrollment-exodus-report-finds/ Mon, 28 Nov 2022 20:34:47 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=700322 Districts where students spent the most time in remote learning during the 2020-21 school year lost at least half a million more students than they would have if they鈥檇 stayed open, a shows.

And those that offered mostly in-person learning during the first full school year of the pandemic not only lost fewer students but were more likely to recover enrollment the following year, according to the paper, released Monday from the American Enterprise Institute.

The analysis shows that enrollment loss was not just 鈥減andemic-related; it was pandemic-response related,鈥 said Nat Malkus, a senior fellow and the deputy director of education policy at the conservative think tank. The same, he said, applies to the decline in achievement chronicled in recent National Assessment of Educational Progress results.


Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for 社区黑料 Newsletter


鈥淭he idea that this is behind us is just absolutely wishful thinking. The consequences are very real,鈥 he said. 鈥淪ome say you鈥檙e going to wear your audience out by saying 鈥榣earning loss, learning loss.鈥 But if we had learning gains of the same size, how many headlines would we be looking at?鈥

The most-remote districts (red line) saw the greatest enrollment loss last year. (American Enterprise Institute)

The study confirms a pattern that researchers at Stanford University identified and takes it a year further to show that families didn鈥檛 come flooding back to districts once they reopened. Now, almost three years after the pandemic began, more districts face the possibility of because of that enrollment loss. And some have used federal relief funds to in their budgets resulting from lost students. That means the so-called 鈥渇iscal cliff鈥 will be even tougher when funds dry up in two years, Malkus said. 

Preliminary for this school year are just beginning to trickle in from the states, and so far the outlook is mixed, according to Burbio, a data services company. Hawaii enrollment declined for a fourth straight year. After a rebound last year, enrollment in is down 1%. Delaware and Arkansas have seen small increases of less than 1% compared to last year, while enrollment is up 1.3% in North Dakota. 

It鈥檚 important to note, Malkus said, that urban districts that were closed the longest and had the most enrollment loss were also steadily losing students before COVID. The pandemic just accelerated that loss.

Those who moved their children to new schools during the pandemic might also be reluctant to make another change even if their lives returned to relative normalcy, Thomas Dee, a Stanford University economist who led last year鈥檚 research, wrote in a recent . 

That seems to be the case for those who enrolled in charter schools. from the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools showed that the large gains during the 2020-21 school year have 鈥渉eld steady.鈥

Districts that had the most remote learning in 2029-21 (in red) were already losing enrollment before the pandemic. (American Enterprise Institute)

Growth in pre-K

While districts lost students in middle and high school, leaders鈥 decisions to stay remote in 2020-21 placed 鈥渓arger burdens鈥 on families with children in the early grades and drove them to search for alternative schools that offered in-person learning, Malkus wrote in his report.

Young children, however, are now contributing to some enrollment growth. Data compiled by Burbio, shows that boosted enrollment last year in multiple districts, from Trenton, New Jersey, to Provo, Utah. In others, pre-K enrollment softened the blow of declines. For example, in Rochester, New York, enrollment would have been down 4.4% last year without pre-K. Instead, it decreased 2.5%. 

also partially accounts for an enrollment increase in the District of Columbia Public Schools this year, even though experts .

The impact of early-childhood programs on K-12 enrollment is particularly evident in California, now in the first year of a statewide expansion of transitional kindergarten, a program for 4-year-olds offered in elementary schools. 

A from the state鈥檚 Legislative Analyst鈥檚 Office estimated that 4-year-olds eligible for the program will account for almost half of enrollment growth in districts through the 2025-26 school year. 

Some districts, such as those in , opened their transitional kindergarten classrooms ahead of schedule, likely to prevent further enrollment decline. And the program is one reason why enrollment loss this fall in is roughly half of what officials forecasted.

To Dee, it makes sense that districts offering early learning programs have seen an uptick. 

鈥淎s people become comfortable accommodating (or simply ignoring) COVID-19 risks,鈥 he said, 鈥渢he families of rising cohorts of young students are likely to be more willing to reconsider public schools.鈥

But he doubts that enrollment in pre-K and the early grades will be enough to offset the substantial losses districts saw two years ago. That鈥檚 because many families moved out of those districts altogether. In his op-ed, he wrote that the 鈥減andemic is fundamentally reshaping the broader economy,鈥 with more parents working from home and high housing costs pushing families out of urban areas.

Even if districts attract new families with young children, that won鈥檛 solve district-wide problems, Malkus added. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not going to fill your second-grade classrooms with pre-K kids.鈥

]]>
Supreme Court Blocks Biden Workplace Vaccine Mandate: 'Significant Encroachment' /article/never-done-before-conservative-scotus-justices-question-biden-vaccine-requirement-as-school-mandate-cases-move-through-courts/ Fri, 07 Jan 2022 21:47:52 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=583087 Updated Jan. 13

Calling it a “significant encroachment,” the Supreme Court on Thursday that would have impacted about a quarter of the nation’s school districts and potentially contributed to further staff shortages.

“Permitting [the聽Occupational Safety and Health Administration]聽to regulate the hazards of daily life 鈥 simply because most Americans have jobs and face those same risks while on the clock 鈥 would significantly expand OSHA鈥檚 regulatory authority without clear congressional authorization,” the opinion聽said.

The court’s three left-leaning justices, Stephen聽Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and聽Elena Kagan, dissented, arguing that the decision “stymies the federal government鈥檚 ability to counter the unparalleled threat that COVID鈥19 poses to our nation鈥檚 workers.”

As schools struggle to handle COVID-19 outbreaks amid staff shortages, the U.S. Supreme Court Friday heard a lawsuit over an employee vaccine mandate that some experts suggest could stretch districts even thinner.


Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for 社区黑料 Newsletter


In November, President Joe Biden that employees in organizations with at least 100 workers be vaccinated or wear a mask and test weekly. The requirement applies to about of the nation鈥檚 public school teachers and staff members, after factoring in the several states that have already imposed their own vaccine requirements for district employees.

The plaintiffs, 27 states and the National Federation of Independent Businesses, sued the U.S. Department of Labor and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, arguing that the mandate 鈥 set to go into effect Monday 鈥 would create a 鈥渓abor upheaval鈥 and that many employees will quit rather than comply. The plaintiffs asked the court to block the mandate from being implemented, and a ruling on that could come as early as this weekend.

鈥淭his is going to cause a massive economic shift in this country,鈥 said Scott Keller, representing the businesses. He and Ohio Solicitor General Ben Flowers argued that states and Congress 鈥 not OSHA 鈥 have the authority over public health regulations and that COVID-19 transmission is a risk everywhere, not just in the workplace.

Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, speaking for the Biden administration, stressed that 鈥済rave danger exists鈥 when people gather indoors together, which they are more likely to do at work.

The hearing took place as other challenges to vaccine mandates 鈥 for both educators and students 鈥 move through the legal system. The San Diego Union School District鈥檚 vaccine mandate is facing two challenges, one of which also awaits a response from the Supreme Court. And a federal judge in Louisiana last week blocked the Biden administration鈥檚 requirement that all Head Start staff be vaccinated by the end of January. 

Even the judge in that case expects the administration to appeal.

鈥淭his issue will certainly be decided by a higher court than this one,鈥 Judge Terry Doughty, of the Western District of Louisiana, wrote in his ruling. A Trump appointee, he argued that the Biden administration has overstepped its authority and the mandate could make it difficult to keep classrooms fully staffed.

鈥淚f the executive branch is allowed to usurp the power of the legislative branch to make laws, then this country is no longer a democracy 鈥 it is a monarchy,鈥 he wrote.

鈥楾housands of people dying鈥

In Friday鈥檚 oral arguments on the OSHA case, members of the Supreme Court鈥檚 conservative majority also questioned the the legality of the agency鈥檚 mandate.

鈥淭his is something that the federal government has never done before,鈥 said Chief Justice John Roberts.

But the more liberal justices focused on case and hospitalization rates.

鈥淏y this point, we know that the best way to prevent spread is for people to get vaccinated,鈥 said Justice Elena Kagan. 鈥淲e are still confronting thousands of people dying every time we look around.鈥
On Wednesday, there were more than 700,000 new cases in the U.S. and more than 1,500 deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention The , however, has declined since the Delta surge in September.

According to Nat Malkus, an education policy expert at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, the mandate would directly apply to districts in 26 states that have their own OSHA plans. But even in those states that are exempt, it could 鈥渃hange the calculus for districts鈥 and make them more likely to require vaccines or regular testing if most other employers in their communities are already enforcing the mandate. In the 24 states directly under OSHA authority, state and local employers are not included.

He noted that if the court opens the door to OSHA having broad authority in this case, it will be 鈥渉arder to close it in the future,鈥 and would strengthen the government鈥檚 argument in the Head Start case. 

While some children turn 5 while in Head Start, most in the federal preschool program for children in poverty, are still too young to be vaccinated. Children are less likely to become seriously ill from COVID-19. But with Omicron leading to higher positivity rates and recent in pediatric COVID-related hospitalizations, medical experts have stressed the importance of surrounding young children with family members and caregivers who are vaccinated.

The National Head Start Association, which represents Head Start families and programs, is calling for a compromise between the administration鈥檚 hard-line position and the 24 states that sued over the mandate. The rule also requires children ages 2 and up to wear masks.

鈥淔ace masks and vaccinations play a critical role in reducing the spread of COVID-19 in early care and educational settings. But the rule wants it all one way and the lawsuit wants it all the other way,鈥 Yasmina Vinci, executive director of the association, said in a statement. 鈥淗ead Start leaders are seeking the middle ground, where local programs have the flexibility to work within local guidelines to keep classrooms open and ensure children don鈥檛 lose access to crucial services because of a mandate that is impossible to operationalize.鈥

鈥楾he uphill effort鈥

But district leaders are concerned about the immediate impact of vaccine mandates on the classroom. 

鈥淚t will make shortages worse and exacerbate the uphill effort to get and keep schools open and kids in schools,鈥 Noelle Ellerson Ng, associate executive director for advocacy and governance at AASA, the School Superintendents Association, said about the OSHA rule.

As they monitor court rulings regarding vaccine mandates for employees, school districts are also watching decisions regarding students.  

The Supreme Court is expected to decide before Jan. 24 whether to hear the case of a pro-life student from Scripps Ranch High School in the San Diego district who objects to human cell lines being used in the testing and creation of the COVID-19 vaccines. Cell lines, developed in laboratories and commonly used to manufacture vaccines, come from fetuses aborted decades ago. 

The mandate applies to students 16 and up. Students who don鈥檛 comply would be enrolled in remote learning.

鈥淭he irony about the mandate is that teachers are allowed to get religious exemptions, but students, who are at far lower risk [from COVID-19], are not,鈥 said attorney Paul Jonna, who represents the plaintiffs.


Anti-vaccine protesters protested outside the San Diego Unified School District office in September when the school board voted to enact a vaccine mandate. (Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images)

In a separate San Diego case, the district plans to appeal a superior court judge鈥檚 decision . Let Them Choose, an advocacy organization, argues that only the state legislature or public health department 鈥 not districts 鈥 have the authority to mandate childhood vaccinations. The law also allows parents and students to opt out for personal beliefs. 

Two advocacy organizations made the same argument over the Los Angeles Unified School District鈥檚 vaccine mandate for students, which has been delayed until fall. In December, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge to block implementation of the mandate.

]]>