Amid COVID-19 pandemic-related learning loss, a widening achievement gap
The far-reaching impact of COVID-era learning loss was particularly pronounced among low-income and Black, Hispanic, and Native students, exacerbating existing disparities. Barriers to learning, a growing digital divide, and a lack of mental health support in schools all contributed to a widening achievement gap between students who have access to resources and those who do not.
Because of COVID-19's disproportionate impact on Black, Hispanic, and Native adults, the effects on children were amplified. Adults experienced higher death rates, increased unemployment, and elevated levels of depression and anxiety compared to their white counterparts. Students attempting to learn remotely faced additional setbacks in families burdened by the added stress of a parent losing a job or the trauma of a sick loved one. Moreover, as many as 4 in 10 students experienced at least one adverse childhood experience during the pandemic, such as economic hardship or broken families due to separation, divorce, or incarceration.
"The message that the pandemic sent was that you're not going to be successful teaching math and reading and science and social studies if kids haven't eaten, they haven't slept, they're worried about their dad's job or their grandmother's recent death," Thomas Toch, director of the independent think tank FutureEd told ABC News earlier this year.
Existing disparities also fall along geographic lines. Students in rural communities are more likely to lack access to the standard technology that has become crucial for academic success. At least 13 out of every 100 rural households lack the minimum broadband connection needed to access virtual classrooms or stream educational videos. One in 6 rural households across six states— Arkansas, New Mexico, Mississippi, Alabama, West Virginia, and Louisiana—lack basic broadband access. In Tribal communities, as many as 1 in 3 households lack high-speed internet.
Poor rural school children tested lower in 2022-2023 but not as low as students in general. For instance, students from families with incomes below the federal poverty threshold score 27 points lower on the eighth-grade National Assessment of Educational Progress math assessment, but rural kids score 22 points lower.
Disparities also exist in nonacademic aspects of education. In nonrural districts, 1 in nearly 300 students have access to a psychologist or school counselor, compared to 1 in 400 rural students, according to the 2023 Why Rural Matters report.
As Dr. Karyn Lewis and Dr. Megan Kuhfel concluded in the NWEA report: "Our most pressing concerns should lie with students who were already teetering on the edge within our education system when COVID-19 hit—those grappling with systemic racism, poverty, and restricted access to opportunity and resources. We already owe these students a great educational debt, and it is a debt we carry with compounding interest."
Comments