Anonymous wrote:Probably a lot of dropouts who decided to work available jobs and make money rather than go to school, especially high school age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reality is that this was most likely driven by socioeconomic circumstances. Poor families that struggled to stay employed during the pandemic, got hit hard by COVID, and had their students drop out to care for younger siblings, work to bring home money, and otherwise support their household. It will be very hard to bring those kids back into the school system after three years.
+1. Some states allow kids to drop out at 16 with parental consent. It’s politically unpopular to say it out loud, but the kids who are far behind grade level and/ or have dozens of unexcused absences every year by the time they reach high school are not going to get anything out of remaining in the system until they’re 18.
Anonymous wrote:The reality is that this was most likely driven by socioeconomic circumstances. Poor families that struggled to stay employed during the pandemic, got hit hard by COVID, and had their students drop out to care for younger siblings, work to bring home money, and otherwise support their household. It will be very hard to bring those kids back into the school system after three years.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks Teachers Union!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks Teachers Union!
Thanks to the crappy parents who let their kids rule the roost! There is no question that my teen would go back to school once schools reopened. Running the streets wasn’t an option. Stop blaming teachers and school closures for crappy parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks Teachers Union!
Thanks to the crappy parents who let their kids rule the roost! There is no question that my teen would go back to school once schools reopened. Running the streets wasn’t an option. Stop blaming teachers and school closures for crappy parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks Teachers Union!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder if some of those children never existed in the first place.
Certain school districts are notorious for trying to pad their numbers, failing to acknowledge transfers, etc.
Read the article. They used year over pre-pandemic from the same states pre-COVID. This is 280,000 kids above the number that got lost before the pandemic. And this is only 21 states. Illinois and Texas, among others did not provide data.
Maybe the missing kids from the 21 states moved to the 29 states that didn’t provide data.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder if some of those children never existed in the first place.
Certain school districts are notorious for trying to pad their numbers, failing to acknowledge transfers, etc.
Read the article. They used year over pre-pandemic from the same states pre-COVID. This is 280,000 kids above the number that got lost before the pandemic. And this is only 21 states. Illinois and Texas, among others did not provide data.