Does DCPS have a plan to remediate the learning loss caused by their long-term pandemic closure?

Anonymous
This article from the faculty director of the Center for Education Policy Research at Harvard University should be an eye opener. What is DCPS' plan to make up what was lost during their long-term closure?

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/05/schools-learning-loss-remote-covid-education/629938/

Kids’ Learning Losses Are Worse Than Educators Are Acknowledging
Remote instruction wasn’t good enough, and schools need a plan to repair the damage to students’ education.

"One-fifth of American students, by our calculations, were enrolled in districts that remained remote for the majority of the 2020–21 school year. For these students, the effects were severe. Growth in student achievement slowed to the point that, even in low-poverty schools, students in fall 2021 had fallen well behind what pre-pandemic patterns would have predicted; in effect, students at low-poverty schools that stayed remote had lost the equivalent of 13 weeks of in-person instruction. At high-poverty schools that stayed remote, students lost the equivalent of 22 weeks. Racial gaps widened too: In the districts that stayed remote for most of last year, the outcome was as if Black and Hispanic students had lost four to five more weeks of instruction than white students had.

By our calculations, about 50 percent of students nationally returned in person in the fall and spent less than a month remote during the 2020–21 school year. In these districts where classrooms reopened relatively quickly, student-achievement gaps by race and socioeconomic status widened a bit in reading but, fortunately, not in math. And overall student achievement fell only modestly. The average student in the quicker-to-reopen districts lost the equivalent of about seven to 10 weeks of in-person instruction. (That losing just a quarter of a typical school year’s academic progress is a relatively good outcome only underscores the dimension of the overall problem.)

What happened in spring 2020 was like flipping off a switch on a vital piece of our social infrastructure. Where schools stayed closed longer, gaps widened; where schools reopened sooner, they didn’t. Schools truly are, as Horace Mann famously argued, the 'balance wheel of the social machinery.'

Like any other parent who witnessed their child dozing in front of a Zoom screen last year, I was not surprised that learning slowed. However, as a researcher, I did find the size of the losses startling—all the more so because I know that very few remedial interventions have ever been shown to produce benefits equivalent to 22 weeks of additional in-person instruction."

"I fear that, in areas where classrooms remained closed for long periods, school officials are not doing the basic math. High-dosage tutoring may produce the equivalent of 19 weeks of instruction for students who receive it, but is a district prepared to offer it to everyone? Alternatively, suppose that a school offers double-dose math for every single student and somehow convinces them to attend summer school, too. That, educational research suggests, would help students make up a total of 15 weeks of lost instruction. Even if every single student in a high-poverty school received both interventions, they would still face a seven-week gap.

Educational interventions have a way of being watered down in practice; many superintendents and school boards may tell themselves that they are taking a variety of steps to help students make up lost time. And yet most district plans are currently nowhere near commensurate with their students’ losses."

Anonymous
OP, you've probably violated copyright law by posting too much of the article. It is likely to get deleted.

Try getting this deleted and starting a new thread with less copy of the article.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP, you've probably violated copyright law by posting too much of the article. It is likely to get deleted.

Try getting this deleted and starting a new thread with less copy of the article.


Really? It's not nearly the whole article.
Anonymous
They don’t care, they really don’t. They assume the kids with better off families will get private tutoring and genuinely don’t care about low income kids. That’s just how American works.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:They don’t care, they really don’t. They assume the kids with better off families will get private tutoring and genuinely don’t care about low income kids. That’s just how American works.


Actually not. Notice that the article says 20% of schools remained remote for the majority of last year. We’re the ones with the “severe effects.”

Most of the country had far more normal academic experiences, which makes the travesty here that much worse.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They don’t care, they really don’t. They assume the kids with better off families will get private tutoring and genuinely don’t care about low income kids. That’s just how American works.


Actually not. Notice that the article says 20% of schools remained remote for the majority of last year. We’re the ones with the “severe effects.”

Most of the country had far more normal academic experiences, which makes the travesty here that much worse.

We were told in April that from our schools Principal ".... there will be summer opportunities at every school [SPED teachers at every school providing services]"
It is now late May and we have heard nothing.


PLEASE VOTE - because this is all driven by our Mayor. What type of recovery do our children deserve?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They don’t care, they really don’t. They assume the kids with better off families will get private tutoring and genuinely don’t care about low income kids. That’s just how American works.


Actually not. Notice that the article says 20% of schools remained remote for the majority of last year. We’re the ones with the “severe effects.”

Most of the country had far more normal academic experiences, which makes the travesty here that much worse.

We were told in April that from our schools Principal ".... there will be summer opportunities at every school [SPED teachers at every school providing services]"
It is now late May and we have heard nothing.


PLEASE VOTE - because this is all driven by our Mayor. What type of recovery do our children deserve?


LOL you think one of the other candidates is going to reform the schools? Don't make us laugh.
Anonymous
DCPS has no plan. I’m a teacher who signed up for high dosage tutoring in my school last fall. There was no structure, curriculum or guidance from anyone, including school leadership. I became a babysitter to 10 of my already far behind students who didn’t want to be there, with behavioral problems, and had no plan. I quit “ high dosage tutoring” at the end of November. I can get 3x what DCPS offers and work 1:1 with a student who is focused.
Anonymous
This is so sad. I agree this is a huge problem. Only parents seem to care and we need to mobilize. Any ideas?
Anonymous
This is Bowser’s leadership. The closed schools. The failure to do anything about the resulting learning loss. You have an opportunity to vote for someone else. Take it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This is Bowser’s leadership. The closed schools. The failure to do anything about the resulting learning loss. You have an opportunity to vote for someone else. Take it.


The other candidates would have the schools closed now.
Anonymous
Your kids have been in person the entire school year. If they are struggling get them a tutor or work with them. Summer is coming. Get some workbooks and help them.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This is Bowser’s leadership. The closed schools. The failure to do anything about the resulting learning loss. You have an opportunity to vote for someone else. Take it.


Please don’t try to tell us that Robert White or an elected school board would have pushed harder to open schools earlier…
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is Bowser’s leadership. The closed schools. The failure to do anything about the resulting learning loss. You have an opportunity to vote for someone else. Take it.


Please don’t try to tell us that Robert White or an elected school board would have pushed harder to open schools earlier…


How did it work for the other 80%, most of which have elected school boards?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Your kids have been in person the entire school year. If they are struggling get them a tutor or work with them. Summer is coming. Get some workbooks and help them.


OP here. Not sure if you are talking to me, but I didn’t post this because my kids are struggling academically. And you do realize that not everybody has the means to hire a tutor, or the ability to teach them, right? If you read the article, you would know that an enormous amount of tutoring hours will be needed to make up the losses incurred during the closures. You cannot minimize this anymore the way you have since 2020.
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