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Research: Achievement Shows Signs of Improvement, but Youngest Kids Need Help

Slow-moving rebound aided by mild summer slide, 鈥榖uoyancy鈥 of students鈥 skills as schools emerge from pandemic

Eamonn Fitzmaurice/成人抖阴/iStock

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Researchers saw promising signs of a slow-moving rebound in student achievement this fall, more than a year after a dire spring where performance 鈥渂ottomed out.鈥

As U.S. students in August and September began their fourth school year under the shroud of COVID-19, researchers from NWEA, the nonprofit behind the widely used MAP Growth assessment, took an early look at their achievement. The data suggest that gaps between pre- and post-pandemic performance have been slowly shrinking. 

Among the biggest contributors, for reasons researchers don鈥檛 quite understand: In 2022, the typical 鈥渟ummer slide鈥 didn鈥檛 slide quite as much, giving kids a small advantage as the school year began.

Karyn Lewis (NWEA)

The new findings are 鈥渆vidence of resiliency on the part of students,鈥 said Karyn Lewis, director of NWEA鈥檚 Center for School and Progress. 鈥淚 think we’re seeing some buoyancy in terms of students’ achievement levels. That’s a testament to simply getting back in the classroom, being reconnected to their peers and their teachers.鈥

But in a more sobering finding, NWEA found that the youngest students in the study 鈥 third-graders who were kindergarteners when the pandemic closed their schools 鈥 showed the largest reading achievement gaps and the least 鈥渞ebounding鈥 from previous tests.

In reading, third-graders reduced their widest achievement gaps by just 10%, far less than other groups. By contrast, sixth-graders鈥 gaps shrank by 38%. The research found similarly small reductions for third-graders in math.

NWEA

鈥淭hat suggests to me it was really detrimental for those kiddos to be doing Zoom school in kindergarten to pick up on some of those foundational reading skills,鈥 said Lewis. 鈥淎nd then for kids that return to the classroom in first grade, imagine trying to learn phonics with your teacher wearing a mask.鈥

These young students鈥 reading improvement was slower than their math improvement, researchers found. And they estimate that it will take them at least five years to fully recover from the pandemic in both reading and math, longer than nearly any other group studied except current eighth-graders. Given the five-year time horizon, many of those students may never fully get up to speed in either subject by the time they finish high school, they warn. 

The new findings add to data NWEA released last month that showed achievement losses in the 2021-2022 school year disproportionately affected low-performing students, whose skills have languished since the pandemic, unlike that of high-performing students. At the time, Lewis told 成人抖阴, 鈥淚f we think of the range of test scores, we see that the ceiling has remained stable. But the bottom has dropped out.鈥 

Robin Lake of the Center on Reinventing Public Education (CRPE)

Meanwhile, the new study found, the highest-performing 10% actually made more progress toward academic mastery than would have been expected absent COVID.

鈥淚n study after study we are seeing clear evidence that while some students are getting back on track quickly, far too many are not,鈥 said of the Center on Reinventing Public Education (CRPE) at Arizona State University. 鈥淲e’re also seeing clear evidence that schools and districts are really struggling to meet student needs.鈥 

Federal ESSER funds, slated to help schools recover from the pandemic, are due to run out over the next three years 鈥 and schools must figure out how they鈥檙e going to spend the money by September 2024. 

鈥淚 think this is a group we really need to keep our eye on and make sure that elementary teachers that are serving them now actually know how to help them catch up,鈥 NWEA鈥檚 Lewis said. 鈥淵ou can imagine the trickle-down effect it has if these kids continue to struggle in reading.鈥

In addition to hurting students who had just transitioned to kindergarten, the pandemic deeply affected those who were even younger 鈥 from newborns to four-year olds, said Michelle Kang, CEO of the National Association for the Education of Young Children. As they prepare for elementary school, those students are going to need supportive teachers, she added, who 鈥渉elp them build on their resilience and thrive in academic and social emotional contexts.鈥

Michelle Kang (National Association for the Education of Young Children)

W. Steven Barnett, senior co-director and founder of the National Institute for Early Education Research, said it makes sense that the youngest students have struggled in reading. 鈥淚f you think about where kids learn math and reading, the home environment has a bigger impact on reading than math. So the extent to which the home environment was also negatively impacted by the pandemic, you’d expect that to have a bigger impact on reading, a bigger impact on younger kids.鈥

While he鈥檚 encouraged by the summer findings, Barnett noted that a lot of federal COVID relief funding remains unspent, so it鈥檚 difficult to draw a direct line between federal aid and improvements in achievement. But he said schools should not waste time figuring out how to spend their relief money going forward, whether it鈥檚 for summer programs or intensive tutoring. 鈥淭here are a bunch of tutoring programs that have been proven highly effective that schools could adopt that identify the kids who are behind,鈥 he said.

Steven Barnett (Rutgers University)

A number of programs offer one-on-one instruction and don鈥檛 require licensed teachers for implementation. Actually, Barnett said, they offer training for volunteer and paraprofessional tutors. He also suggested that student-teachers could step in to fill a tutoring void in a tight teacher labor market. 

CRPE鈥檚 Lake said the new data suggests one clear conclusion: 鈥淣ow is the time to shift course. We must start acting like this is a national emergency and bring new solutions to the table. We cannot continue to ignore the mounting evidence that we are failing to give this generation of students a solid foundation for the future.鈥

A ‘dampened鈥 summer slide

NWEA鈥檚 Lewis said the overall upward progress among the students studied is in part due to what she called a 鈥渓ess-worse slide鈥 over the summer, compared to typical years.

And while it might seem logical to attribute that progress to intensive, ESSER-supported summer learning efforts, like Barnett, Lewis cautioned against trying to find 鈥渁 thread of causality鈥 in the findings. 

Actually, she said, other research suggests that many of the available summer remediation efforts 鈥渨ere probably not taken advantage of to the extent that would really lead to the results that we’re seeing here.鈥

But Lewis said it鈥檚 important to put both the progress and challenges in perspective. Those who would call the nation鈥檚 third-graders 鈥渁 lost generation鈥 鈥 as well as those who don鈥檛 think the ongoing gaps are a big deal 鈥 are both missing the larger point.

鈥淟ike most things, I think somewhere in the middle is where we need to find ourselves,鈥 she said. What may be most important is 鈥渟hining light on which kids have been harmed the most鈥 and serving them in a less standardized, more personalized way 鈥 for instance, through a 鈥渓ayered approach鈥 to tutoring, summer programming, and other strategies. 

鈥淭here will be no silver bullet,鈥 Lewis said.

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