Education
Related: About this forumCoronavirus pandemic has worsened racial disparities in education, lawmakers told
WASHINGTON The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated racial inequities in education, a disparity that Congress needs to help rectify, the former education chief under President Barack Obama told lawmakers Monday.
Our education system is fraught with inequities that existed before COVID-19, John King Jr., who served as Secretary of Education in 2016-2017, told lawmakers on the House Education and Labor Committee. He is president and CEO of The Education Trust, a nonprofit organization that focuses on opportunity and achievement gaps in education.
During school closures, researchers found that Black, Latino and Native American students were disproportionately less likely to have access to devices and home internet service and parents who were able to telework.
Researchers estimated that students could lose seven months of learning on average during the pandemic. But they found Black students may fall behind by more than 10 months, and Hispanic students by nine months, according to an analysis by research firm McKinsey & Co.
Read more: https://ohiocapitaljournal.com/2020/06/24/coronavirus-pandemic-has-worsened-racial-disparities-in-education-lawmakers-told/
Igel
(36,486 posts)Yang's preaching notwithstanding.
The Texas Ed Agency is pushing to reopen schools in Texas. They're getting pushback.
At the same time, they have data. Don't know that it's high-quality data, but "I've been told that this person over there probably thinks ..." has been cited as high-quality standard in some discussions, so let's ignore quality (and quantity) for now.
The data consisted of teachers in every school district evaluating their students' availability and engagedness. Could the be reached early on after school closures? Later? Did they participate early on? Did they participate later? Each student in a "core class" had a datum for that core class; non-core classes were less important. All that information went to the state for analysis.
My data confirmed my biases. If you were poor, non-native in English; if you were black or Latino; then you had lower engagement rates. Note that in my school every student has a tablet computer and software, lots of businesses offer students free wifi (even in the parking lot) and the school set up wifi hotspots so nearly every school parking lot, whether it was "your" high school or the elementary school 2 blocks away was computer-capable. They also had tech services set up on line for software problems and a socially-distanced drop-off/repair process. Overall, about 20% of my students never logged in, and while some were white and privileged more were poor or black or Latino; about 40% didn't actually do a large chunk of the work. I'm including in the other 60% those who learned nothing because all they did was open each assignemnt so it was marked as "viewed" so they could log in to take the quiz, googling the answers. (Which some overachiever lickspittles promptly posted within 30-40 minutes of the quizzes' going live.)
Schools are hard put to be honest with this. If we failed these kids, disproportionately poor and of color, then we'd have our accountability ratings dinged harshly. At the same time, passing them is social injustice. And there was no way to contact each and every one using every means necessary--you can only leave so many voice mails or hear single mothers with 4 kids say that she's trying to work and can't navigate all the software and plus she never these classes and it's it *our* job to teach? "Yes, ma'am, but if your kid never logs in ..."
In other words, dispose of digital divide to a large extent, and the racial/linguistic/class/social divides sprang to life. Except for those who were so not bought-into the system that wholesale cheating was their norm.
whistler162
(11,155 posts)Rural schools or schools with populations that don't live in areas that are serviced by a cable company are relegated to either a MiFi device if lucky, maybe satellite, DISH TV, or just SOL for online learning.
WE NEED A MODERN TVA FOR INTERNET SERVICE!
One thing if you are a teacher suggest to your computer guru's, we are you know ;}, to download the data on students and teachers from Google Admin, if you use Google, and find out how many students were online or offline from March to June, the full data exported from Google Admin will give you the last sign-on date.