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Many Parents Don鈥檛 Know How Kids Are Doing in School: 9 Insights into Pandemic Recovery & Aftermath

A curated roundup of headlines about how the pandemic is shaping schools and education policy, vetted by AEI Visiting Fellow John Bailey.

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This is our biweekly briefing on the pandemic, vetted by John Bailey. See the full archive.

This Week鈥檚 Top Story

  • : “Many American parents would be shocked to know where their kids were actually achieving. Nationally, 90% of parents think their children are reading and doing math at or above grade level. In fact, 26% of eighth graders are proficient or above in math and 31% are proficient or above in English, according to Learning Heroes, an organization that collects data and creates resources to improve parent-teacher relationships.”
  • “There are two reasons for the staggering mismatch between what teachers know and what parents think. The first is that many report cards do not measure just achievement, or what a child knows, but a basket of items including attendance, effort, homework completion and behavior.”
  • “The second reason parents are in the dark about their children鈥檚 performance is that teachers are neither trained nor given ample time to have honest conversations with them. They rightly fear that they will be blamed, not believed, or not supported by their principals if they tell parents exactly where their children are performing.”
A new COVID-19 variant might be able to evade current and previous vaccines more effectively than earlier strains. A new booster is expected in September. (Getty Images)

Key Insights 

  • : “What鈥檚 troubling about this variant, scientists say, is that it contains more than 30 mutations on the spike protein, which is what helps the virus enter cells and cause an infection. This means it might be able to evade current vaccines and previous infections more easily, and it likely won鈥檛 be a great match with the fall booster expected to be approved soon.”
  • “What鈥檚 unknown is how transmissible the variant is and whether it will spread widely or fizzle out like many other variants. Another important, outstanding question is whether it causes more severe disease.”
  • “, the CDC said scientists are evaluating the effectiveness of the fall COVID-19 booster, expected to roll out in September, and the new variant.”
  • .

  • : “If students can鈥檛 catch up, the learning loss may impact their future earnings and even become a drag on the U.S. economy.”
  • ” 鈥業 hate to be so doom and gloom about it,鈥 said Robin Lake, director of the Center on Reinventing Public Education, a nonpartisan research and policy analysis organization. 鈥楤ut this is very serious. It鈥檚 an all-hands-on-deck moment for kids affected by COVID.鈥 鈥
  • “First, school districts did not use all of their funds to address learning loss specifically.鈥
  • 鈥淎lso, reversing the learning loss is easier said than done. Some school districts are facing a variety of challenges including staff shortages. And many school leaders say that political polarization around LGBTQ+ issues, critical race theory and COVID-19 has disrupted schooling, according to a report from the Center on Reinventing Public Education and RAND.鈥

  • on new reports from and .
  • The report from Education Resource Strategies identifies risk factors that indicate the likely severity of a district鈥檚 post-ESSER fiscal situation:
    • Districts that saw an enormous leap in per-pupil revenue likely faced more hurdles to spending that money quickly and wisely than districts that got only a small sum per student.
    • Districts that invested federal relief funds in recurring expenses like increased teacher salaries or new staff positions will have to find new funding sources to cover those investments or risk needing to cut them.
    • Districts seeing increases in state aid or local tax revenue will have an easier time filling ESSER-shaped budget holes than districts in states that have kept education funding flat amid high inflation.
    • Some states and localities allow districts to maintain funding reserves from state and local sources that they can use for emergency situations, like the sudden loss of federal relief aid. Those districts have a financial cushion that their counterparts in states that restrict how districts can spend excess money won鈥檛 have.
    • Districts that have been slow to invest their ESSER allocations could be tempted to hastily allocate funds to recurring or unwise expenses that come back to haunt them.
Getty Images

  • : “Policymakers should pursue opportunities to allocate additional funding toward in-school day, high-impact tutoring, in time for the 2025 fiscal year. In tandem, policymakers could streamline policies to provide clarity and guidance for local system and school leaders鈥 use of federal funding.”
  • “State and district system leaders should consider carry-forward dollars in federal funding streams that may have grown with the availability of ESSER. Tutoring programs could be further prioritized by using state and district set-asides across these funding streams.”
  • “School leaders should use their Title I allocations to support their students鈥 learning needs by leveraging tutoring as an evidence-based intervention.”

  • reports on a new
  • “Teachers are leaving the classroom at higher rates, and the pool of candidates is not big enough to replace them.”
  • “Tuan Nguyen, a Kansas State University education professor, last year set out with two colleagues to collect statewide data on teacher shortages. They counted more than 36,500 vacancies in 37 states and D.C. for the 2021-22 school year. Updated data found that teacher shortages had grown 35% among that group, to more than 49,000 vacancies.”

Gen Z鈥檚 Declining College Interest Persists 鈥 Even Among Middle Schoolers

  • 成人抖阴 on a new
  • “Two in five Gen Z students agreed with the statement: 鈥楾he pandemic has made me less interested in pursuing higher education.鈥 鈥
  • “That attitude has translated into an 8% decline in college enrollment from 2019 to 2022, showing how attending college is no longer a given for Gen Z.”
  • “YPulse found Gen Z students were more likely to choose Google and YouTube over a teacher when asked: 鈥業f you wanted to learn something new, what resources would you use?鈥 鈥

Fueled by Teacher Shortages, 鈥榋oom-in-a-Room鈥 Makes a Comeback

  • Via 成人抖阴: “Live, online instruction in school has long linked students to subjects they couldn鈥檛 otherwise take, like A.P. Calculus or Latin. But as districts struggle to fill teaching vacancies, they are increasingly turning to companies like Proximity to teach core subjects.”
  • “Districts are spending thousands, sometimes millions, of dollars on virtual teachers, according to 成人抖阴鈥檚 review of purchase orders. 鈥 The practice 鈥 derided at the height of the pandemic as 鈥淶oom-in-a-room鈥 鈥 is raising eyebrows as students return to school and continue to grapple with the lingering effects of remote learning.”

  • : 鈥淪tep 1: Assume all students are going to use the technology.”
  • “There is a lot of confusion and panic, but also a fair bit of curiosity and excitement. Mainly, educators want to know: How do we actually use this stuff to help students learn, rather than just try to catch them cheating?”
  • 鈥淪econd, schools should stop relying on A.I. detector programs to catch cheaters.鈥
  • “My third piece of advice 鈥 is that teachers should focus less on warning students about the shortcomings of generative A.I. than on figuring out what the technology does well.”
  • “My last piece of advice for schools that are flummoxed by generative A.I. is this: Treat this year 鈥 the first full academic year of the post-ChatGPT era 鈥 as a learning experience, and don鈥檛 expect to get everything right.”

鈥n a Lighter Note

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Disclosure: John Bailey is an adviser to the Walton Family Foundation, which provides financial support to .

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