Missed Learning – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Thu, 15 Dec 2022 18:24:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Missed Learning – 社区黑料 32 32 Strong Link in Big City Districts鈥 4th-Grade Math Scores to School Closures /article/strong-link-in-big-city-districts-4th-grade-math-scores-to-school-closures/ Wed, 26 Oct 2022 17:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=698771 The size of younger students鈥 learning setbacks in math during the pandemic varied in accordance with how long their school system stayed closed in 2020-21, an analysis by 社区黑料 of district-level National Assessment of Educational Progress data shows.

Districts that spent the majority of that year learning remotely tended to lose more ground in fourth-grade math scores than districts that reopened sooner. Every 10 additional days of school closures was associated with a roughly 0.2-point loss on NAEP from 2019 to 2022. The pattern was statistically significant and held even when controlling for the share of students eligible for free- or reduced-price lunch, a proxy for poverty.

鈥淭he districts with more remote learning have larger test score losses,鈥 said Emily Oster, a Brown University economics professor who has tracked school closures through the pandemic. 


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鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty consistent with what we have seen up until now,鈥 added the researcher, an early and ardent supporter of reopening schools during the pandemic shutdown whose positions were .

The finding adds to the that online learning during the pandemic had a negative impact on student learning outcomes, even while there is renewed debate over how strongly the 2022 NAEP scores reflect it. The highly anticipated results released Monday showed the largest drops ever recorded in 4th and 8th grade math.

Peggy Carr

Peggy Carr, head of the U.S. Department of Education center that administers NAEP exams, played down any possible relationships between school closures and test results.

鈥淭here is nothing in this data that tells us there is a measurable difference between states and districts based solely on how long schools were closed,鈥 she said during a Friday press conference.

Oster, who also of the relationship between remote learning and NAEP results, called the National Center for Education Statistics director鈥檚 statement 鈥渙dd鈥 and 鈥渘ot very consistent with what we are seeing in the data.鈥

However, she acknowledged that there is an element of truth to Carr鈥檚 words.

鈥淢aybe what they’re saying is that [school closure] is not the only determinant, and that鈥檚 right. It is not the case that there is a straight line between remoteness and test score losses,鈥 she said.

An NCES spokesperson affirmed that stance Tuesday, denying any 鈥渟imple direct relationship between duration of remote learning and score declines based on NAEP results鈥 in a statement emailed to 社区黑料.

鈥淐ontrolling for free- or reduced-price lunch is helpful but not sufficient,鈥 the spokesperson continued. 鈥淣CES will be conducting analyses that conform to the highest statistical standards, consider multiple variables and link data collected by NCES to other high quality datasets.鈥

On the whole, results from what鈥檚 known as the Nation鈥檚 Report Card revealed the stark drop offs in math and a slide in reading since 2019, the last time the exam was administered. Some individual school systems, however, performed better than expected, including Los Angeles, among the districts which stayed in remote learning the longest and which saw improvements in reading for fourth graders and in both reading and math for eighth graders.

Since the release of NAEP results on Monday, and have conducted several analyses correlating scores with length of school closures and found moderate, statistically significant links. However, those analyses have largely focused on state data, an approach some experts warn against because it lumps districts that reopened quickly with those that stayed shuttered much longer.

鈥淲ithin states, there’s a lot of heterogeneity in terms of closure policies,鈥 said Tom Loveless, a longtime education researcher who formerly led the Brookings Institution鈥檚 Brown Center on Education Policy.

鈥淟ooking at district data is superior to looking at state data because that’s where the [reopening] decisions were made,鈥 he said.

社区黑料 took the district-level approach, crunching data from a sample of large urban school systems included in the NAEP release. Their scores were then matched with closure data from Oster鈥檚 , which tracked the percentage of the 2020-21 school year that districts offered remote, hybrid or in-person instruction. From the full sample of 26 school systems, Fresno was removed because it had no publicized 2022 NAEP scores and New York City, the nation鈥檚 largest school district, and Shelby County, Tennessee were excluded because they had no district-level school closure data available in the Hub.

Among the 23 remaining school systems, fourth-grade math was the only subject with a statistically significant relationship between district performance and time spent in remote learning. There were weak correlations in fourth-grade reading and eighth-grade math and no association for eighth-grade reading.

鈥淚t was very hard for the little kids to focus on Zoom,鈥 said Robin Lake, director of the Center on Reinventing Public Education. 鈥淚t wouldn’t surprise me if the younger students saw more of an impact on literacy skills and early foundational computational skills.鈥

Her research group analyzed data on the effects of school closures, finding , especially for younger students and those living in poverty. 

Robin Lake (Center on Reinventing Public Education)

鈥淪chools stayed closed too long, especially in urban areas,鈥 Lake said, noting that her judgment is much easier to make now with the benefit of hindsight as opposed to during the height of COVID when the science on infections and transmissibility was still coming into focus.

The variation in the NAEP results represents 鈥渟hades of badness,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ome states are celebrating not being as bad as other states, but nobody has much to celebrate here.鈥

NAEP results must be interpreted carefully, experts caution. They are built to show how students are doing, not to explain the reasons behind their performance, Loveless said. (He compared the exam to a thermometer: 鈥淚t can tell you if you have a temperature, but it can鈥檛 tell you why.鈥)

However, the exam is also the only U.S. test administered to students in all 50 states, making it 鈥渢he only game in town when it comes to comparing across states,鈥 said the former Brookings Institution researcher.

社区黑料 analysis, he said, 鈥渕akes an addition鈥 to the continued dialogue on the impacts of school closures during the pandemic.

Now, with the extent of pandemic missed learning coming into greater focus across the nation, Lake said, it鈥檚 time to hone in on how to respond.

鈥淲e’ve just got a lot of work to do to give kids back what they were owed, both academically and developmentally.鈥

Oster agreed that it may be time to put aside reopening showdowns and instead work toward recovery.

鈥淭here is a very reasonable desire to move on from the discussion of, 鈥楬ow important were school closures?鈥 into, 鈥楬ow do we fix this?鈥欌 she said. 鈥淚’m quite sympathetic to that desire to move on.鈥

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鈥楾oo Good to Be True鈥: NH Gives Students $1,000 for Tutoring 鈥 Yet Sign-Ups Lag /article/too-good-to-be-true-nh-gives-students-1000-for-tutoring-yet-sign-ups-lag/ Mon, 29 Aug 2022 16:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=695642 For years, Kim Paige was panicked about how to help her daughter, as teachers for years 鈥 from elementary through early high school 鈥 brushed off the student鈥檚 continued struggles to master one of the basic skills K-12 education is meant to deliver: the ability to spell.

When COVID struck in 2020, the then-eighth grader鈥檚 Upper Valley, New Hampshire middle school campus shut down for several weeks to pivot to virtual learning, like most others across the country. Paige knew then that her daughter Amy 鈥 whose name has been changed in this piece for the student鈥檚 privacy 鈥 was at risk of falling behind even further. Once online school started, live instruction was only on a 鈥減art-time basis,鈥 Paige said.

鈥淭here was lost learning time,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ometimes there weren’t teachers because the teachers were sick.鈥


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Although Paige didn鈥檛 know it yet, Amy had dyslexia. For years, the now-17-year-old鈥檚 condition went undiagnosed. Meanwhile, it complicated the teen鈥檚 part-time job at a clothing store, because she struggled to type in email addresses at the cash register.

In a last-ditch effort to help her daughter, Paige connected with a tutor specializing in phonics-based literacy, who she now works with via a relatively new state program. After beginning tutoring, Amy showed quick improvement on spelling and reading tests administered by her high school, Paige said. Amy鈥檚 literacy coach recognized signs of dyslexia and pointed the family toward screening for the disability, which led to her diagnosis and extra services at school.

鈥淚鈥檝e seen progress,鈥 Paige said. 鈥淭he way [her tutor] works with her is not a way 鈥 a teacher would have the time to work with her in a classroom situation.鈥

That sort of individualized, intensive coaching is a key solution the Granite State has bet on to help students like Amy get back on track after the pandemic. The state is entering its second year offering the scholarship, which uses a digital wallet to provide $1,000 for private tutoring to any young person whose education was negatively impacted by the pandemic. The scholarship is available to all students, regardless of need, and can be applied toward tutoring from state-approved educators.

鈥淲hen I explain the program to [parents], they become very excited, like, 鈥極h, this is great,鈥欌 New Hampshire Education Commissioner Frank Edelblut said. 鈥淚n some cases, they’re almost like, 鈥業t鈥檚 too good to be true. How can this possibly be?鈥欌

But families in New Hampshire have tapped into less than a third of the available scholarship funds. So far this academic year, 724 young people have received scholarships 鈥 accounting for just $724,000 out of a $2.5 million total funded by federal COVID relief cash. Upon inception, the state granted scholarship eligibility only to students from low-income families, but with signups lagging and substantial funds remaining, they made access universal.

Kim Paige鈥檚 daughter uses manipulatives like brightly colored blocks to reinforce spelling and reading lessons. (Asher Lehrer-Small)

State testing in 2022 revealed that more than half of New Hampshire students were not proficient in math and over 40% were behind in English, though scores have rebounded slightly since 2021, according to data provided by the state. Research shows sustained individual or small-group tutoring can be one of the best ways to help children catch up.

鈥淥ne student might be struggling with functions. Another is struggling with algebraic equations,鈥 Edelblut said. 鈥淭hose are the kinds of things that in a one-on-one tutoring session with a teacher that can be drawn out, they can be addressed, they can be targeted, and we can fill in those gaps.鈥

Soon after the Paige family began tutoring, they saw a post on social media about the YES! grant and realized they qualified. Though they鈥檙e still working out the logistics of the digital wallet, the funds will cover more than two months of intensive lessons, which will be 鈥渄efinitely helpful, without a doubt,鈥 Paige said.

The program has also served its purpose for student Sylas Marrotte. The scholarship gave him access to a trained special education teacher for twice-a-week math and reading tutoring, grandmother Sherry Newman said.

鈥淢y grandson, who already had learning disabilities, was falling way behind [during COVID],鈥 Newman wrote in an email to 社区黑料. 鈥淭he tutor was very flexible and supportive.鈥

Any New Hampshire student who鈥檚 learning was negatively impacted by COVID is eligible for a $1,000 scholarship for private tutoring until funds run out.

The program could help to 鈥渄emocratize鈥 the private tutoring market, which often is available only to wealthier families, said Matthew Kraft, associate professor of education at Brown University. 

But in his eyes, the slow uptake among low-income families is a damning indicator, signaling either poor advertising to the neediest parents or failure to alleviate other barriers such as transportation costs. 

It鈥檚 possible many families 鈥渏ust never learned about the program or couldn’t figure out how to sign up or didn’t think that they could make it work,鈥 Kraft said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think 鈥 they鈥檝e met the demand in that group of students.鈥

Nationwide, parental interest in learning recovery options has been lower than policymakers would have hoped, according to recent from the Brookings Institute. Despite significant gaps in learning for millions of students across the country, less than a third of families said they wanted their kids to participate in tutoring and less than a quarter said they were interested in district-run summer camps.

Even if all the New Hampshire tutoring funds get disbursed, Kraft observed, it will still only serve 2,500 learners 鈥 a drop in the bucket compared to the state鈥檚 over 185,000 students, including roughly 50,000 who are eligible for free- or reduced-price lunch, a proxy indicator for the number of students living in poverty.

The New Hampshire Department of Education does not 鈥渁t this time鈥 know the share of low-income students who have taken advantage of the tutoring scholarship money compared to wealthier youth, Edelblut said. Students could opt for virtual sessions in cases where transportation presented a barrier, he noted.

The YES! scholarship is one of three state-funded tutoring options available to New Hampshire families. The state announced this month that it had that will give more than 100,000 students access to the site鈥檚 24/7 digital tutoring services. Since early in the pandemic, the state has also partnered with Khan Academy founder Sal Khan鈥檚 initiative, providing the state鈥檚 students with free access to the site鈥檚 learning resources. That site has seen about 4,300 New Hampshire visitors, said Kimberly Houghton, a spokesperson for the state鈥檚 Department of Education, although she did not have figures on how many tutoring sessions students have actually participated in.

Among the 74 individuals and organizations registered by the state as , including specialists in math, literacy, speech and executive functioning, a handful said over email that none or just one student had reached out for tutoring sessions.

But Krista Martin, who runs the Sylvan Learning centers in Portsmouth and Salem, has worked with six students who have used YES! scholarship money to pay for sessions. Two of those families were already paying for Sylvan tutoring services before the grant and now use the funds to offset costs, but the other four enrolled once they received the scholarship, Martin said. 

For the most part, families come in hopes that the sessions will help their kids recover from the pandemic, Martin wrote in an email.

鈥溾嬧婩or many of our students, the breakdowns started during the COVID years,鈥 Martin said. 鈥淪ince the pandemic, we have heard from many families that they want their children to enjoy school again and show interest in what they are learning like they did before COVID.鈥

For the Paige family, Amy鈥檚 struggles began earlier, but YES! has helped 鈥 at least a little 鈥 along the way. On an August evening in northern New Hampshire, tutor Lynne Howard sat at her dining table and helped the teen break down words into their individual sound components. Howard was a longtime reading specialist in the local schools and now runs a tutoring company called Summit Literacy.

鈥淪ay hush,鈥 Howard said.

鈥淗ush,鈥 Amy responded.

鈥淣ow say hush but change 鈥榮hh鈥 to 鈥榤m,鈥 鈥 Howard added on.

鈥淗um,鈥 Amy answered.

Word by word, sound by sound, Howard and Amy made out ways to fill the student鈥檚 learning gaps. They identified prefixes, suffixes, root words, closed and open vowels 鈥 steadily making progress to improve her spelling. And their time together ended with praise that, for many years before tutoring, Paige was concerned she鈥檇 never hear about her daughter鈥檚 literacy.

鈥淎nd that鈥檚 it, you worked hard today,鈥 Howard said at the end of an hour. 鈥淓xcellent job.鈥

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New Data: Was 2022鈥檚 Summer Learning 鈥楨xplosion鈥 Enough To Reverse COVID Losses? /article/new-data-was-2022s-summer-learning-explosion-enough-to-reverse-covid-losses/ Mon, 22 Aug 2022 11:15:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=694663 In this summer, young people explored museums and grew garden veggies. In , they built robots and learned Black history. In , they immersed themselves in languages like French, Mandarin, Hmong and Dakota.

鈥淚t鈥檚 actually a little surreal鈥 seeing the rich slate of offerings, said Brodrick Clarke, vice president of the .听

He鈥檚 worked at summer learning organizations for over a quarter century, making what used to be a difficult case to school administrators: That districts should offer camp-style July programs to all students rather than enrolling only those who flunked classes during the academic year.

Suddenly, his job has become much easier. 

Brodrick Clarke (National Summer Learning Association)

A growing consensus has elevated summer learning programs to top priority after three consecutive school years disrupted by the pandemic. Several studies, including a 2018 , show camps blending fun and academics give students a leg up in key subject areas. So with millions of students nationwide lagging behind grade level in math and reading, and with schools sitting on billions of dollars in COVID relief cash, summer learning programs have become a go-to solution. 

So far, schools nationwide have poured $3.1 billion in American Rescue Plan dollars into summer and afterschool initiatives, according to an from Georgetown University鈥檚 FutureEd think tank. Summer learning has emerged as districts鈥 鈥渘umber one priority鈥 for academic recovery spending, said Phyllis Jordan, the organization鈥檚 associate director.

Cindy Marten (U.S. Education Department)

鈥淲e’re actually investing in programs that we know work and have had results. We just get to do them at a much larger scale because there’s finally funding for it,鈥 U.S. Deputy Education Secretary Cindy Marten told 社区黑料. 

鈥淚f you put enriching, engaging experiences together for kids and give them a chance to be together, they can learn.鈥

However, the picture remains murky on just how much progress states, districts and community organizations have actually made toward catching up students before the school year re-starts.

鈥淲e do not have data on the number of summer programs this year compared to years past,鈥 said Jen Rinehart, senior vice president of strategy and programs at the Afterschool Alliance. 鈥淪imilarly, we do not have data on the number of students enrolled this year.鈥

Marten acknowledged she was not aware of any federal effort to track how many youth are engaging in summer learning programs this year and did not clarify when the results of these programs will come into focus.

To fill the gap, 社区黑料 obtained exclusive datasets from , a data service that tracks school policy, and the research-based auditing publicly shared information about districts鈥 summer offerings. Burbio鈥檚 figures include the 200 largest U.S. school systems and CRPE鈥檚 cover 100 major metropolitan districts, many of which overlap. Though there are roughly 13,800 districts in the country, the 200 largest account for over a quarter of the nation鈥檚 students.

The analysis comes after the Department of Education announced the Engage Every Student Initiative in July to expand access to summer and afterschool offerings. Accompanying the launch, First Lady Jill Biden and Education Secretary Miguel Cardona toured programs in Connecticut, Michigan and Georgia.

The Burbio and CRPE numbers reveal that the vast majority of school systems did indeed provide opportunities for students to catch up on learning and most offered their summer programs at no cost to families. Specifically:

  • 93% of districts, according to Burbio, and 87%, according to CRPE, offered summer learning programs this year
  • 79% of school systems that had programs provided them at no cost to families
  • The average program length was 154 hours, just under four weeks and roughly equivalent to 12% of the academic school year. However, some offerings only covered about 30 hours, while others made up nearly 350 total hours

Additionally, most districts offered programs that went beyond rote academics 鈥 including activities such as theater, debate and robotics 鈥 and about 2 in 5 worked with community organizations to flesh out their camps. Nearly all programs included breakfast, lunch or both:

  • Of the districts that offered summer learning opportunities, at least 83% included credit recovery options, 80% mixed academics with enrichment activities such as sports, arts or social-emotional learning, 48% offered programs for students with learning disabilities and 39% had dedicated options for English learners
  • 96% of programs provided meals to children and 74% offered free transportation
  • At least 39% of districts partnered with community organizations on summer offerings

The data align with recent figures reported by the , which surveyed a representative sample of 859 public schools in June. The figures are not an apples-to-apples comparison with the Burbio and CRPE data because they focus on individual schools rather than districts, but also point to extensive programming nationwide. NCES found:

  • Three-quarters of schools offered learning and enrichment programs this summer
  • School leaders estimated that 18-20% of their students enrolled, compared to 13-16% during a typical year
  • 49% of education leaders said they partnered with an outside organization, 14% offered internship programs and 13% offered summer jobs or work-based learning programs

鈥淲hen we talk about academic recovery 鈥 you can’t do it just within the regular school day,鈥 said Daniel Domenech, executive director of the American Association of School Administrators. 鈥淵ou need to make sure acceleration is extra time. The summer has become that time.鈥

Horizons, a summer learning program offered in several U.S. cities, teaches young people to swim. First Lady Jill Biden and Education Secretary Miguel Cardona visited the New Haven site in July.

A question of equity

Maritza Guridy, who has five children in Philadelphia public schools and also works as deputy director of parent voice with the , said some families in her network were able to find programs that met their needs while others were not.

鈥淔or those that [registered] early, they were able to get in there. For those that waited, it’s unfortunate,鈥 she told 社区黑料.

She enrolled her kids in a local chapter of the nationally acclaimed program and also for a shorter stint at an organization called . Among her considerations were aspects like program cost, learning opportunities and emotional supports, but also factors like fun, clear communication from leadership and a building with central air.

In addition to academics, her children have practiced yoga and went for twice-a-week swim lessons at the local YMCA. One day, they came home with a gleeful announcement: 鈥淢ommy, I jumped into the deep side of the pool today 鈥 and I wasn鈥檛 scared!鈥

It thrilled Guridy, but she knew other families have missed out on similar joys because of barriers such as lack of transportation or no translated information about the opportunity. Guridy wants officials who plan programs to consider accessibility.

鈥淚s [messaging] being offered in different languages?,鈥 she prompts them. 鈥淗ow are parents supposed to enroll their children if they don’t even understand the application?鈥

Maritza Guridy in her North Philadelphia kitchen. (Asher Lehrer-Small)

It鈥檚 an equity issue, said Clarke, the National Summer Learning Association VP.  Youth who don鈥檛 have access to summer programs can see academic gains evaporate between June and September, a well-documented concept known as 鈥summer slide.鈥 Now the issue is particularly pressing, because students living in poverty have the starkest pandemic learning deficits.

鈥淔amilies with access and privilege go into their bank accounts and provide great opportunities for their kids during the summertime,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he 26 million young people that are on free and reduced lunch 鈥 don’t have that luxury to do so. But they certainly need, want and deserve to have those opportunities.鈥

A student working at the Horizons summer program in New Haven, Connecticut, where First Lady Jill Biden and Education Secretary Miguel Cardona visited in July. (Jill Biden/Twitter)

鈥楨xplosion鈥 or 鈥榓fterthought?鈥

With the stakes at an all-time high as schools reel from the pandemic鈥檚 impacts, experts have mixed views on whether summer offerings have actually scaled up this year.

鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing an explosion of programs,鈥 said Ron Ottinger, executive director of , an organization connected to a network of thousands of providers across the country.

Meanwhile, Christine Pitts, who has done her own summer learning analysis as CRPE鈥檚 director of impact and communications, has a more pessimistic view.

In 2022, 鈥淸districts] were offering less than they were last year. So it’s almost like summer slipped back into that characterization of being an afterthought again,鈥 she told 社区黑料.

Her team found that school systems provided fewer offerings for English learners and fewer programs with social-emotional supports this summer compared to last.

鈥淚t’s hard to speculate at a national level, why that might have dropped off,鈥 said Marten, the deputy secretary. Some districts may have decided their 2021 summer programs had done enough to catch learners up and that they could scale back this year, she said. However, if leaders wanted to maintain programs but were facing a lack of funds, she encouraged them to tap resources from the new initiative.

Contrasting the data Pitts saw, Nicholas Munyan-Penney spoke to officials in over 30 states about their summer learning programs while researching for a report with . The narrative he heard was of continued growth.

鈥淎necdotally, they’ve said that there’s definitely been an increase in enrollment this summer,鈥 the researcher told 社区黑料.

Rinehart also cites data that indicate an upward trend. In the spring of 2022, her organization and 90% said they were planning to offer summer programs, compared to 79% at the same time a year earlier. Respondents also indicated they expected upticks in enrollment, with an increased share expressing concern they wouldn鈥檛 be able to meet families鈥 demand for programs.

In one of the only direct comparisons between this year and last, the recently released NCES data found no change between 2021 and 2022, with the share of schools saying they offered summer learning programs holding steady at 75%.

鈥楬ow are we going to fill the staff?鈥

One factor often hindering summer learning expansion has been a staff, only the latest symptom of wider shortages that have affected K-12 schools for much of the past year.

鈥淥fficials are finding it very hard to find teachers,鈥 said Domenech. 鈥淚n many cases, the problem has been that where the district has large numbers of kids sign up for the summer programs, they wind up wanting to cut back because they just don’t have the staff to cover it.鈥

In Madison, Wisconsin, for example, administrators had to from their summer offerings, about 1 in 6 students who had signed up, because of 鈥渦nanticipated staffing challenges.鈥

Gia Maxwell works as a site director at summer learning provider . Throughout the spring, she joined monthly calls with leaders from across the Breakthrough network, which operates in 26 cities. Her colleagues were continually worried about finding enough instructors.

鈥淓veryone was talking about, 鈥楬ow are we going to fill the staff? How are we going to fill the staff,鈥欌 she told 社区黑料.

Gia Maxwell (LinkedIn)

Her Miami program usually finds all 130 youth and 30 adult staff for its summer teaching corps by May, she said. But this year, it took until halfway through teacher training in mid-June to recruit everyone, and they had to hire more teenage candidates than usual. 

The Providence, Rhode Island Breakthrough location was forced to this summer altogether, explaining 鈥渨e have struggled to recruit students and teachers this year.鈥

To combat shortages, Arkansas brought in tutors from its to staff summer programs, said Munyan-Penney. In West Virginia, program leaders pulled from teacher training programs in the state to fill out their summer learning staff ranks. And Arizona boosted teachers鈥 wages 20% for the summer months to entice instructors.

They鈥檙e among the states 鈥溾嬧媡hinking about the staffing issue and being proactive about it,鈥 said the Education Reform Now researcher.

鈥楳ath, Reading and a Little Stampeding鈥

Several states shared provisional data with 社区黑料 on their summer offerings, though many said they won鈥檛 have finalized enrollment or academic impact numbers for months.  

In Arizona, Gov. Doug Ducey launched the which state leaders estimate has served about 100,000 campers 鈥 10% of the state鈥檚 1 million students 鈥 across 680 sites, including at least one in every county. 

Arizona officials went to great lengths to spread the word about the program. The state ran a including ads on television, radio, social media and in magazines, and direct texts to parents in both English and Spanish informing them of the free programs.

鈥淲e targeted lower-income families, as the goal of free summer camp was to see the highest number of campers from families that may not have been able to afford an adventure-style summer camp in prior years,鈥 Kaitlin Harrier, the governor鈥檚 senior policy advisor, wrote in an email to 社区黑料. 

The governor鈥檚 office opted for a 鈥渟ummer camp鈥 approach rather than a 鈥渟ummer school鈥 model, describing the opportunities as 鈥淢ath, Reading, and a Little Stampeding,鈥 said Harrier.

鈥淚t is no secret that when kids are having fun, it sets up a great foundation for learning,鈥 she added.

Students鈥 display stained hands after making tie-dye shirts at Crane School District鈥檚 鈥淐amp Crane,鈥 part of the AZ OnTrack initiative. (Crane School District / Twitter)

In Connecticut, the state also rolled out a grant program to help providers beef up their summer offerings and defray program costs for low-income youth. The state disbursed roughly $8 million in grants last summer and increased that sum to $12 million for 2022, said Eric Scoville, communications director for the State Department of Education.

Enrollment across a sample of 121 locations nearly doubled, from 17,000 to 32,000, between 2020 and 2021, according to an spearheaded by University of Connecticut researchers. However, it鈥檚 too early to tell how many students the state reached this summer, said Scoville.

鈥淐ommunities will fall in love with these programs. They will say, 鈥榃e鈥檙e never going to let this stop. We’re not just doing this because there was a pandemic. We’re doing this because this is what’s good for kids.鈥濃

-Cindy Marten, U.S. Deputy Secretary of Education

In North Carolina, all 115 school districts offered one or more summer learning programs this year funded by COVID relief money, each attended by 30 to 200 students, said Todd Silberman, a public information officer at the state鈥檚 Department of Public Instruction. The enrollment figures will not be finalized for several weeks, he said, but he expects the total will be lower than 2021, when the state legislature required math, science, English and enrichment summer learning programs.

At the city level, Baltimore City Public Schools has scaled up its programming sharply thanks to COVID relief dollars. The maximum number of youth the 77,800-student district had served between June and August previous to the pandemic had been 9,000, said Ronda Welsh, the district鈥檚 extended learning coordinator. But in 2021, they reached 15,000 and have served at least that many again in 2022.

鈥淥ur goal was to provide as many opportunities as we could for students in Baltimore,鈥 Welsh told 社区黑料.

Students learn geometry at the Baltimore Emerging Scholars program, one of the city鈥檚 more than two dozen free offerings. (Asher Lehrer-Small)

Tulsa, for its part, has also cultivated a thriving summer learning culture, part of a wider 鈥淐ity of Learning鈥 initiative that has been in the works for several years. That infrastructure has made the district into a poster child for community partnership, with over 40 youth-serving organizations contributing to the district鈥檚 programming this summer 鈥 including clubs for debating, biking and rowing.

鈥淭he summer is the time that kids get to experience those things they otherwise would not have the opportunity to do, especially during the school year,鈥 said Jackie DuPont, executive director of the , which orchestrates the connections between the nonprofits and the district.

However, the district has not been able to maintain its high summer learning enrollment. Last summer, about a third of its 33,000 students participated in summer learning 鈥 an unusually large share. This year, a total of 7,000 youth engaged in the school system鈥檚 initiative, Director of Expanded Learning Jessica Goodman estimated. 

鈥溾嬧婰ast summer was really an immediate response to not having kids in our school buildings 鈥 so some families just needed that time more than they did this summer,鈥 she told 社区黑料.

Despite enrollment fluctuations, Marten believes the proliferation of new summer learning programs nationwide will outlast the influx of federal funding.

鈥淐ommunities will fall in love with these programs,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey will say, 鈥榃e鈥檙e never going to let this stop. We’re not just doing this because there was a pandemic. We’re doing this because this is what’s good for kids. Let’s keep doing it.鈥欌

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Gifted Summer Programs Skew White & Wealthy. Not Baltimore鈥檚 鈥 And It鈥檚 Free /article/gifted-summer-programs-skew-white-wealthy-not-baltimores-and-its-free/ Wed, 17 Aug 2022 17:00:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=694936 Baltimore, Maryland

The course is 鈥淐loudy With a Chance of Science,鈥 and James Ramirez places his hand-fashioned tin foil boat into a bin of water, squealing with excitement as he discovers it floats. The first grader and his classmates are learning about density by testing how many pebbles each students鈥 contraption will hold before it sinks.

Ramirez tosses in every stone from his first handful 鈥 quickly surpassing the class record of five pebbles 鈥 and rushes back for more as his boat remains above water. The child, who is reserved and hasn鈥檛 spoken yet this period, keeps adding weight, laughing and wriggling his shoulders with each successful placement.

鈥溾27, 28, 29鈥︹ 

He has the attention of the class now and his peers count with him.

鈥…42, 43, 44鈥︹

With each pebble, Ramirez is doing more than proving he crafted a sturdy ship. He is accomplishing something educators across the country are anxiously hoping he and millions of students like him can do: accelerate their learning to get back on track after COVID.


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James Ramirez learns about density in a class called 鈥淐loudy With a Chance of Science.鈥 (Asher Lehrer-Small)

The first grader is one of 481 youngsters enrolled in Baltimore鈥檚 Emerging Scholars program this summer and one of over 15,000 students participating in no-cost summer learning opportunities through Baltimore City Schools. Thanks to COVID relief funds, the 77,800-student district is serving more than twice as many young people as its pre-pandemic max of 9,000, said Ronda Welsh, the district鈥檚 extended learning coordinator. 

Among the offerings are typical summer school options like credit recovery and career exploration, but also more specialized programs like debate, farm and forest camp, robotics and 鈥淔reedom Schools鈥 focused on Black history. The Emerging Scholars program stands out as a camp providing accelerated academic instruction, but with none of the cost or admission requirements typical of gifted programming.

鈥淥ur goal was to provide as many opportunities as we could for students in Baltimore,鈥 Welsh told 社区黑料. 鈥淲e wanted students to not only make progress academically, focusing on math and [English], but also the social-emotional aspect as well as enrichment.鈥

A map of the locations across Baltimore offering free summer learning opportunities through the school district. Colors signify the age ranges served by each program. Pink dots represent camps run by local schools rather than district leadership. (Screenshot, Baltimore City Public Schools)

Young people in and nationwide continue to score far below pre-pandemic levels in reading and math tests, with more severe deficits for high-poverty schools. Experts estimate it may take a half-decade to fully recover. Meanwhile, many officials pin their hopes on summer learning efforts like those in Baltimore to make up lost ground.

鈥淓specially because of COVID, the kids are a little behind,鈥 said Claudia Wiseman, a second-grade summer science instructor with Baltimore Emerging Scholars. During the school year, she鈥檚 an elementary special educator and said months of Zoom school have meant many young learners still lack basic skills like how to hold a pencil. The students she鈥檚 teaching now will be 鈥渁 little better prepared for second grade,鈥 she hopes.

Students build pyramids in geometry class. (Asher Lehrer-Small)

It’s afternoon pickup time at the Emerging Scholars鈥 John Ruhrah Elementary School campus, and Ramirez鈥檚 mother Christy Miranda arrives. Staff tell her about her son鈥檚 latest feat: 63 pebbles.

Miranda beams. The program is helping the family recognize their son鈥檚 potential, unlocking academic capacities she didn鈥檛 realize he possessed.

鈥淗e鈥檚 learning a lot,鈥 she told 社区黑料. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know he had the ability to do so.鈥

During the year, her son has few opportunities for rigorous coursework, she said, explaining that his school is 鈥渧ery defunded.鈥

Christy Miranda with her son at pickup time. (Asher Lehrer-Small)

But this summer is different. Baltimore Emerging Scholars is a six-week gifted and talented program. In collaboration with , a global leader in gifted education, the camp provides high-level content in science, math and literacy to rising 1st  through 6th graders. 

鈥淒uring the regular year, [school] is just teachers rambling on about stuff I already know about 鈥 but this is new material,鈥 said rising fifth grader Basil Coleman. 鈥淚鈥檓 just having a great time here.鈥

Unlike most other gifted programs, the camp doesn鈥檛 rely solely on test scores for eligibility but rather welcomes virtually any student who is up for the challenge. As a result, the cohort of students is more diverse than the group of students identified for gifted lessons during the academic year. Some 68% of summer students are Black, 14% are Hispanic, 9% are white and 3% are Asian 鈥 figures that closely resemble district-wide demographic averages.

Rae Lymer, who manages the program and reviews every student application, explained that anytime a student has a recorded assessment at or above grade level, it automatically qualifies the youngster for the program. If such a metric does not exist, the administrator calls families directly, looking for an alternative qualification such as if the applicant likes to ask lots of questions or thinks outside the box.

鈥淣inety-nine percent of the time, what I hear is, 鈥楳y kid is completely under-challenged and they’re not motivated by school and so that’s why you’re not seeing scores,鈥欌 Lymer told 社区黑料, explaining that the program almost never turns away motivated students. 

Rae Lymer works with families to ensure that all motivated students can participate in Baltimore Emerging Scholars, even if they don鈥檛 yet have the grades or test scores typical of gifted and talented programming. (Asher Lehrer-Small)

Youth who choose to participate usually rise to the occasion, the data suggest. While the summer program does not yet have numbers on its academic impact, Emerging Scholars also runs afterschool offerings during the fall and spring. In 2020-21, the most recent data available, the share of participants testing at or above grade level increased 18 percentage points in reading and 39 percentage points in math over the course of the year.

鈥淲e鈥檙e learning advanced stuff and we鈥檙e able to get ahead,鈥 said 11-year-old Ama Amoateng, between stints on the playground during recess. 鈥淚t makes me feel smarter.鈥

After engaging in the summer program, 鈥渕any of these kids will become identified [as gifted],鈥 anticipates Stacey Johnson, spokesperson for Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth. 鈥淚t鈥檚 reaching kids we wouldn鈥檛 otherwise reach.鈥

Indeed, parent Torrey Parker said his daughter Skylar got 鈥渂umped up鈥 in reading and science last school year, which he believes was 鈥渁bsolutely鈥 because of the work she did in the program.

Skylar Parker got 鈥渂umped up鈥 in reading and science last school year thanks to her participation in the Emerging Scholars program, her father said. (Asher Lehrer-Small)

The rapid growth attests to what education scholars have long posited: That academic talent is equally distributed across all students without regard to race, class or gender 鈥 but that access to advanced learning opportunities are not. 

鈥淲e firmly believe that if opportunities are provided, students will flourish,鈥 said Lymer.

In one reading course focused on mystery novels, rising fifth graders are already 12 chapters into their third book in as many weeks and engaging in what their instructor called 鈥渄etective work鈥 to predict the ending. In another classroom, second graders concoct oobleck, a water and cornstarch mixture that has both solid and liquid properties, to learn about states of matter and 鈥渘on-Newtonian fluids.鈥 Down the hall in 鈥淭oyology,鈥 first graders study inertia and momentum by unleashing metal and plastic slinkies down a set of stairs.

Asher Lehrer-Small

A classroom of fifth graders peer down the lenses of microscopes at magazine cutouts of the letter 鈥渆,鈥 diagramming what they see at various magnification levels. It鈥檚 several students鈥 first time using a microscope and they鈥檙e surprised to find what one describes as 鈥渟tatic on a TV.鈥

鈥淭hey were playing, but they were also learning,鈥 said Toyology instructor Tamika Robinson.

Even the students admit it鈥檚 a good time.

鈥淏ecause it鈥檚 called summer school, most of us thought it would be like school 鈥 but instead it鈥檚 a lot of activities and really engaging,鈥 said Brooke Bennett, 12.

From left to right, Ama Amoateng, 11; Brooke Bennett, 12; Averi Paige, 11 and Rachel Jenkins, 11, at recess. (Asher Lehrer-Small)

Propelled, perhaps, by rave reviews, the camp has grown nearly three-fold since its 2019 launch and added about 35% new seats this year while transitioning back to in-person programming for the first time since COVID. Staffing challenges, which have of numerous summer programs across the country, haven鈥檛 posed a barrier for Emerging Scholars. In fact, two teachers rather than one work in each classroom under its co-teaching model.

鈥淢any of our teachers come back from year to year because they really respect and value their time with our program,鈥 said Lymer.

Teacher Kyra Thomas attended a gifted program as a young person and chose to be an educator to inspire future generations to succeed. Her childhood program exposed her to aviation, and she flew a plane before she took driver鈥檚 ed. Now she uses her experiences to remind her students of their limitless potential. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want you to think the sky is the limit,鈥 she likes to tell them, 鈥渂ecause I鈥檝e been there.鈥 (Asher Lehrer-Small)

As the day winds down, a dozen rising first graders arrive at their last class, Social-Emotional Learning. Shoulders slouch and one student鈥檚 head is on his desk. They鈥檝e just watched a on how to keep a growth mindset and their instructor Brother Modlin wakes them up with some call-and-response. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 not 鈥業 can鈥檛 do it,鈥 is it class?鈥 He asks the question by trailing off. 鈥淚t鈥檚 鈥業 can鈥檛 do it鈥︹欌

鈥淵ET,鈥 they exclaim, picking up their heads and once again regaining attention.

Brother Modlin holds one of the many student journals he keeps on display in his classroom. 鈥淭hese books are their personalities,鈥 he said. (Asher Lehrer-Small)

Modlin works as a school counselor during the year, but was previously a therapist at a juvenile detention center in the city. 

鈥淢y whole thing as a counselor is about growth mindset,鈥 he told 社区黑料. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have bad situations, especially in Baltimore. 鈥 If I give them a growth mindset, they can rise out of any situation without depending on anyone but themselves.鈥

The lessons are having an impact for 10-year-old Akorede Adekola.

鈥淚 feel really confident and relief [after SEL class],鈥 he said. 鈥淚 get to show my feelings and get it all out.鈥

Instructor Michelle Brown-Christian wishes she had known about Baltimore Emerging Scholars when her daughter, now a rising eighth grader, was young enough to participate. (Asher Lehrer-Small)

The program鈥檚 approach, coupling rigorous academic work with emotional supports, could be a promising model, believes fourth-grade instructor Michelle Brown-Christian. She scoffs at the idea that the curricula, fashioned for gifted children, should be reserved for only a select few.

鈥淭his could work for any child that wants to learn,鈥 she said.

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