Featured

California Students Suffered Academically During Pandemic School Year

According to data from California’s Department of Education, California’s K-12 students experienced significant academic setbacks during the 2020-21’s pandemic school year. Nearly half the students who took the standardized test last year failed to meet English proficiency standards set forth by the state. Additionally, students younger than those older performed worse, which indicates the effect of remote learning on students still developing their literacy skills.

Around 60 percent of fourth and third graders failed to meet English standards. 40% of 11th-graders failed to meet English standards. More than 60 percent of Latino and black students failed to meet the requirements.

Data from the California Department of Education shows that students also struggled academically in math classes. California’s math standards were not met by nearly two-thirds (33%) of students. The standards were not met by nearly 70% of the sixth, seventh, and eighth-graders. Nearly 65 percent of fourth, seventh, or 11th graders failed to meet the math standards.

After the U.S. Department of Education canceled a federal testing requirement, the 2020-21 standardized exam was the first to be administered. It was created after schools were closed in March 2020 because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Despite these setbacks, the data didn’t defeat Linda Darling-Hammond, California State Board of Education President. She stated that although the story is difficult, it is not as difficult as I had hoped based on other projections. “For older children, it’s much more discouraging than we would have feared.”

In addition to disappointing English and maths results, graduation rates have slightly decreased across the state. The four-year graduation rate for 2019-20 was 84.2 percent. It was 84.2 percent in 2019-20. Last year it was 83.6 percent. Black students suffered the most with graduation rates dropping by four points, from 76.8 percent to 72.5 percent.

Heather Hough, Executive Director of Policy Analysis for California Education, stated that “for that 4 percent”, those students are students whose lives have been altered for the better.

Last year’s academic setbacks were compounded by an increase in chronic absenteeism, which is when students are absent for more than ten percent of the school calendar year. The remote learning school year saw a rise in chronic absenteeism rates of around 12 percent to 14%.

Hough stated that students who did not participate in the online learning program were most likely to be disconnected, absent from school for a long time, or lack of support at home. The results are alarming. They are alarming.

Nate Kennedy

Recent Posts

Mid-Air Crisis: Boeing 747-400 Erupts in Flames, Makes Emergency Landing on Indonesia to Saudi Arabia Flight

An Indonesian Boeing aircraft caught fire during take-off and forced an emergency landing. The incident…

2 days ago

Heartbreaking Twist in Search for Missing US Space Force Member

Search crews found the body of a 23-year-old hiker who disappeared earlier this week as…

2 days ago

Security Scare: Two Jordanians Disguised as Amazon Drivers Attempt to Infiltrate Marine Base; White House and ICE Responses Stun Nation

This case is a sham and the White House must answer. Two Jordanians pretended to…

2 days ago

Shockwaves in Golf World: Scottie Scheffler Arrested in Kentucky Just Days Before PGA Championship

Scottie Scheffler, who was hoping to win the first PGA Championship in his career, ended…

2 days ago

Redefining Work: The Call to Reclaim the American Workplace

Silicon Valley reports describe the workplaces of America’s greatest legends as cold, dark, and lifeless.…

3 days ago

Massive Strike Looms: 48,000 California Student Workers Vote to Protest Crackdowns

Wait until 48,000 graduate students, teaching assistants and researchers at 17 University of California campuses…

3 days ago