deny ignorance.

 

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The Covid education gap
#1
The "covid gap in education" refers to the learning loss and widening achievement gaps that students experienced because of the disruption caused by the pandemic. According to some studies, students are on average four to five months behind in math and reading, and students of color and low-income students are the most affected

(article on conservative website The Hill: https://thehill.com/homenews/education/4...hool-year/)

While I see concerns on the national basis, I'm not seeing a lot of conversation about it here in Dallas.  In fact, what I see is "well, they're catching up" and I'm not entirely sure I believe that since Texas has a habit of "teaching to the test" rather than actually focusing on the issue. https://texas2036.org/posts/tracking-cov...ning-loss/

There's some interesting talk on Reddit, though, including one about the pandemic even having an impact on college students: https://www.reddit.com/r/Professors/comm...ing_worse/

So is it a concern where you live?  Is anyone doing anything other than hand-wringing about it?
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#2
(01-30-2024, 08:10 PM)Byrd Wrote: The "covid gap in education" refers to the learning loss and widening achievement gaps that students experienced because of the disruption caused by the pandemic. According to some studies, students are on average four to five months behind in math and reading, and students of color and low-income students are the most affected

(article on conservative website The Hill: https://thehill.com/homenews/education/4...hool-year/)

While I see concerns on the national basis, I'm not seeing a lot of conversation about it here in Dallas.  In fact, what I see is "well, they're catching up" and I'm not entirely sure I believe that since Texas has a habit of "teaching to the test" rather than actually focusing on the issue. https://texas2036.org/posts/tracking-cov...ning-loss/

There's some interesting talk on Reddit, though, including one about the pandemic even having an impact on college students: https://www.reddit.com/r/Professors/comm...ing_worse/

So is it a concern where you live?  Is anyone doing anything other than hand-wringing about it?

Our son was home-schooled prior to covid, didn't skip a beat during or afterwards.

He's now head and shoulders above his peers.

I know this is anecdotal but society has gotten dumber.
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#3
The genie is out of the bottle concerning public education in New Zealand. Decades of poor education policies, the COVID-19 pandemic and reversing the few gains (charter schools) combined with fibre internet availability are in play. Attendance rates in traditional classrooms have plummeted in recent times.

A small sample of the issues.

https://alwynpoole.substack.com/p/gettin...ung-people

Nor are children receiving an education in the school system.

https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/5040...al-decline

If students in school aren't in a productive learning environment, they are in jail from 9 am - 3 pm during weekdays, outside of the school holidays.  (Emphasis mine).
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