News and Media

What Can You Do About Pandemic Learning Losses?
Article Source: https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/what_can_you_do_about_pandemic_learning_losses
A school psychologist and parent suggests three ways to rethink learning loss and reboot education to help students thrive academically.
Every parent can probably remember the moment that COVID-19 stay-at-home orders hit. As a school psychologist and parent, I remember (naively) thinking it would be short-term鈥攁nd maybe even fun to 鈥渉omeschool鈥 for a few weeks! I mean, I know how to help kids learn, it鈥檚 my job. I even wrote one of the GGSC鈥檚 most-shared articles of 2020 on .
Then, like every parent on the planet, months in,聽. My definition of a good day of 鈥渓earning鈥 shifted from my third-grader acquiring the skill of multiplying fractions to a day without a meltdown (mine or my kids鈥). The new metric of successful learning became a day when my kids accessed their coping skills. It made sense to me as a school psychologist to shift the focus from academics to social-emotional skills, because stressed-out kids can鈥檛 learn fractions anyway. No one learns well in fight-or-flight mode.
鈥↖n my role as a school psychologist, the past two years have been鈥ell, rough. I have seen a student hold up a sign on Zoom that read, 鈥淚 can鈥檛 learn like this.鈥 I鈥檝e seen students melt down, shut down, and disappear from school altogether. I鈥檝e comforted crying parents when they felt hopeless. And I鈥檝e had my fair share of meetings where I鈥檝e encouraged teachers and school psychologists to not quit under all the stress.
I鈥檝e worried about the emotional toll on our students as well as academic learning loss, particularly when I read that show students four to five months behind in reading and math at the end of the 2021 school year. Even more alarming is the that suggests that students of color and students in low-income communities showed even steeper declines than their white and more affluent peers.
Further, even before COVID-19, students with disabilities and English-language learners experienced persistent opportunity gaps and lower achievement and graduation rates. shows that during remote learning, students with disabilities did not receive the specialized support they needed and had higher rates of absenteeism, incomplete work, and course failures than their non-disabled peers. In short, pre-pandemic cracks of inequity in our school system have widened. That troubles me, and it might trouble you, too.
But what can we do about it now? Um鈥ike today?