Author name: paulmusumba

Pandemic Teacher Shortages Imperil In-Person Schooling

The nation’s schools need thousands of more teachers, full-time and substitute, to keep classrooms open during coronavirus outbreaks. As exposure to the coronavirus forced thousands of teachers across the United States to stay home and quarantine this winter, administrators in the Washoe County School District, which serves 62,000 students in western Nevada, pulled out all […]

Pandemic Teacher Shortages Imperil In-Person Schooling Read More »

A-lost-generation

A lost generation’: Surge of research reveals students sliding backward, most vulnerable worst affected

After the U.S. education system fractured into Zoom screens last spring, experts feared millions of children would fall behind. Hard evidence now shows they were right. A flood of new data — on the national, state and district levels — finds students began this academic year behind. Most of the research concludes students of color

A lost generation’: Surge of research reveals students sliding backward, most vulnerable worst affected Read More »

students-learning-new-skills

Students At This Aurora School Are Learning To Teach Themselves New Skills

Spending most of 2020 attending school virtually, students at a small charter school in Aurora are enjoying a new kind of class where everyone chooses what to learn. “It’s kind of boring to sit on a Zoom screen all day,” 14-year-old Karinne Jones said. “It feels good to just work on something I’m passionate about.”

Students At This Aurora School Are Learning To Teach Themselves New Skills Read More »

online-education

Virtual Instruction Isn’t Getting High Marks From Parents, But Many Still Prefer It

Parents whose children are learning in person full time are the most pleased with the quality of their child’s education. The hybrid on/off approach, meanwhile, isn’t providing much more academic benefit than purely virtual instruction, according to parents. And while parents of fully virtual students are less satisfied than parents of kids attending school in

Virtual Instruction Isn’t Getting High Marks From Parents, But Many Still Prefer It Read More »

class-room

We Consider This A First Victory’: Penn Professors See University Gift As An Important Step For Funding Philadelphia Schools

Professor Ann Farnsworth-Alvear hopes a $100 million donation over 10 years from the University of Pennsylvania to the city’s school district will only be the beginning of a longer conversation about how to properly fund schools. She along with other Penn professors and staff had pushed for months for their university to pay up to

We Consider This A First Victory’: Penn Professors See University Gift As An Important Step For Funding Philadelphia Schools Read More »

school-reopening

Surges In Covid Cases Are Upending School Reopening Plans Across The U.s.

Rising COVID cases are derailing plans by school districts across the country to reopen their buildings and pushing some schools that had opened to close once again. Just this week, the Detroit school district suspended all in-person learning until January. Health officials ordered schools in Indianapolis to do the same. Philadelphia put its plans to bring young students back

Surges In Covid Cases Are Upending School Reopening Plans Across The U.s. Read More »

high-school-test

High School Seniors Have Made No Progress In Math Or Reading On Closely Watched Federal Test

American high school seniors’ math scores didn’t improve between 2015 and 2019, while their reading scores fell, according to the latest round of federal test results. The scores highlight the country’s broader failure to boost student test scores over the last decade and the particular stubbornness of high school reading results, which have actually declined since the early 1990s.

High School Seniors Have Made No Progress In Math Or Reading On Closely Watched Federal Test Read More »

school-building

The Pandemic Is Spotlighting Longstanding Issues With America’s School Buildings

The Government Accountability Office sounded a dire warning: One in three public school students — some 14 million — was learning in a building in need of extensive repair. In New Orleans, that meant rotting buildings with no air conditioning. In rural California, it meant difficult-to-maintain portable classrooms. America’s school facilities, one observer said, were

The Pandemic Is Spotlighting Longstanding Issues With America’s School Buildings Read More »