American children continue to miss an alarming amount of school even after the Covid-19 pandemic

American children continue to miss an alarming amount of school even after the Covid-19 pandemic

Post-covid, American children‌ are still missing far too ⁤much school

Two hundred and fifty years‌ ago, Thomas Jefferson ‌wrote one of the first ‌bills ​calling for universal,‍ publicly funded education. He wanted all the children‌ in his state of Virginia to attend ​classes. Not everyone⁣ was convinced. His bill never passed, and it took over 100 years for school to become compulsory​ across the whole of America.

For most of the past century, attendance grew. Then the covid-19 pandemic happened. For⁣ the best part of two years, children were forced to learn at ⁣home, staring at laptops. As they start the 2023-24 school ​year, a terrifying proportion still seem barely to be back.

According‌ to a‍ study published in early ‌August, in the 2021-22 academic year 28% of schoolchildren missed at least⁣ three and a half weeks of⁤ school. The study, conducted by Thomas Dee, an education professor at‌ Stanford University, found that “chronic absenteeism”, defined as when an‍ enrolled pupil misses 10% of the school year, almost doubled overall between 2018-19 and 2021-22. It went up in all 40 states​ in the study as well as in‌ the District of Columbia. In Alaska, the state with the highest rate ⁣of chronic⁣ absenteeism, nearly half of all pupils missed enough school‌ to be counted.

2023-08-24 07:47:07
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