Category: Top Stories

  • Title IX: Education Department Guidance Harmful to Young Women | National Review

    Title IX: Education Department Guidance Harmful to Young Women | National Review

    President Joe Biden’s Department of Education has issued guidance declaring that Title IX’s prohibition on sex discrimination also prohibits discrimination — or so-called discrimination — on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.

    The new guidance mirrors the stance taken by Barack Obama’s administration during the final year of his presidency, when the Education Department issued a “Dear Colleague” letter tacking on “sexual orientation” and “gender identity” to the definition of sex discrimination as outlined in Title IX.

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    Wielding this radical redefinition of terms, the Obama administration proceeded to mandate that federally funded schools use students’ preferred pronouns and permit students to use bathrooms, locker rooms, and accommodations, and participate in athletics, on the basis of self-identified gender rather than biological sex.

    Those policies were reversed under then-President Donald Trump, whose administration rejected Obama’s “Dear Colleague” letter and allowed schools to divide bathrooms, athletic teams, and dorm rooms on the basis of biological sex. In the meantime, states have begun to enact their own policies on the matter, declaring specifically in the realm of student athletics that biological sex still matters.

    Justifying this reversion to the Obama-era guidance, Biden’s officials at the Education Department argue that they’ve merely interpreted the Supreme Court’s decision in Bostock v. Clayton County to mean that “sex discrimination” now includes sexual orientation and gender identity for the purposes of Title IX.

    This is a poor reading of what was already a faulty Court ruling. In Bostock, the Court held that Title VII’s prohibition on sex discrimination in the context of employment also forbade employment discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity — but the majority decision was silent on whether that holding applied to other nondiscrimination laws.

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    Though Biden’s officials evidently hope to strengthen their guidance by giving it the appearance of a Supreme Court imprimatur, the Education Department’s “interpretation” of Title IX is no more sanctioned by federal law than it was when the Obama administration attempted it.

    The implications of the Biden administration’s move are immense. For one thing, supporters of the new guidance hope that it will prevent states from enacting and enforcing “Fairness in Girls’ Sports” laws, which are growing in popularity and which require students to compete in athletics alongside members of their own biological sex.

    While opponents of such policies — among them news reporters — allege that such laws “bar transgender athletes from playing sports,” the reality is far less sensational. These policies ensure that young female athletes aren’t forced to compete against biological males, who maintain obvious physical advantages that are especially relevant when it comes to sports.

    But redefining sex discrimination for schools across the country has implications beyond youth athletics. In several key contexts, this redefinition will put girls’ privacy and safety at risk, permitting a biological male to enter any female-only space without anything more than an assurance that he identifies as female. One need not be a critic of gender theory to understand why such a situation poses unique risks to female students.

    With this policy, the Biden administration has overstepped its constitutional authority, circumventing the legislative process to impose on the country a radical redefinition of sex that coerces educational institutions into violating the rights of young women.

    This content was originally published here.

  • Sex education courses need to include asexuality

    Sex education courses need to include asexuality

    Students aren’t being taught in formative sex education courses that asexuality is in fact a valid sexual orientation, leaving some ace students feeling lonely or “sexually broken.” 

    This essay discusses sexual coercion and mentions r*pe

    By Ebony Purks

    Since coming out as asexual a little over a year ago, I’ve noticed how adequate asexual representation is severely lacking across many industries, communities, and spaces; both digital and in-person. Most notably, spaces such as sex education, the sex-positivity movement, mainstream films and television shows, and even some queer spaces often neglect asexual people. Because of this, many ace individuals reap the consequences of being treated as an invisible or nonexistent community. For instance, we may discover our sexuality later in life, all the while feeling sexually confused until we do. But even if and when we learn of our ace identity, we may fail to understand the full spectrum of asexuality

    The lack of asexual representation in sex education courses in particular proves to be among the most harmful for ace individuals. Not seeing ourselves onscreen, within movements or communities may hinder our self-actualization, but the dismissal of asexual students and asexuality in sexual education creates potentially dangerous environments for ace students to exist in.

    For starters, sex education classes assume students’ sexuality to be heterosexual and students are preached to about abstinence as if they are all clamoring to have sex. In doing this, sex education courses treat a desire to have sex as the norm and anything else as nonexistent. However. the generalization that all students are straight and sex addictive actively erases asexual students’ identities, especially for those who identify as both ace and a non-hetero romantic orientation. This also hurts the many asexual students sitting in sex education courses who aren’t yet aware they are ace because they’ve never known asexuality to be a legitimate sexuality they can identify as. And, consequently, students aren’t being taught in what is a formative education course that asexuality is in fact a valid sexual orientation, leaving some ace students feeling lonely or “sexually broken.” 

    RECOMMENDED: Why Dating For Asexual People is Unnecessarily Difficult

    This is affirmed by Dr. Nazanin Moali, a sex therapist based in Los Angeles and host of the Sexology podcast, who says, “[Although] asexuality is a spectrum, many [asexual] individuals do not experience sexual desire and arousal, which in turn might make them feel broken and defective [within a hyper-sexual society]. Looking through the heteronormative sex-ed lens, lack of [sexual] interests would get labeled as a form of sexual dysfunction; however, this might be a normal and healthy experience for [asexual] individuals.” Then there’s the common misconception that asexuality is abstinence. Sex education courses rarely illustrate the distinction that a person practicing abstinence is choosing to abstain from sex while asexual people are not entertaining a choice. 

    On the other hand, there are ace students who may have an idea that their sexual attraction differs from other students who start to show an interest in sex. But these particular asexual adolescents are afraid to confide in a trusted adult or peer about their sexuality out of fear of being gaslit. Adults, in particular, will often tell young ace people asexuality is something they will grow out of with time. Asexual adolescents may then internalize the misconception that they must engage in sex or sexual acts despite not wanting to in order to “fix” themselves or fit in with their peers, as the adults in their life suggest and their sex education courses don’t negate. This additionally causes other students to “develop a narrow and unrealistic image of individuals with an asexual orientation, placing additional pressure on asexual students to perform [sexually] in certain and expected ways,” Dr. Moali explains. 

    All of this considered, neglecting ace identities from sex education courses just further erases asexuality from public perception, can confuse young people who are ace, and even opens the gateway for ace people to be coerced into sexual activity (because of the continued narrative that everyone desires to have sex). What’s worse, asexual people all-too-often face harm from others through corrective rape because many people think asexuality is a problem that must be cured. Teachings of consent in sex education classes are vital for the safety of all students but aren’t frequently taught properly, if at all. So, it’s imperative for the adults leading sex-ed courses to effectively educate students about consent and emphasize its importance, including the danger of pressuring or coercing those who are not at all interested in sex. 

    So to ensure the safety of asexual students, even long after they graduate, the range surrounding the asexual experience must be an inherent lesson within sex education. It must be made clear that there is a distinction between being asexual and practicing abstinence. Going even further, to rectify the many other misconceptions of asexuality, there must also be a distinction taught between romantic attraction and sexual attraction as some asexual people do experience romantic attraction to others. 

    RECOMMENDED: Between My Thighs Is All Mine: A Journey To Accepting My Asexual Identity

    Ultimately, Dr. Moali confidently believes “by affirming asexuality as a normal part of one’s sexual orientation, the revised [sex education] courses can help [asexual] individuals make informed decisions about their sexual experiences. Instead of navigating relationships from the place of feeling inferior and broken, these courses [can] support students in constructing a healthy narrative about their own sexual identity.”

    What’s most important is the inclusion of asexuality as part of a general sex education course will provide opportunities to all students and validate a wide range of sexual narratives. Dr. Moali further mentions how inclusive sex education courses would help asexuals feel comfortable coming out to friends and family, reduce secrecy or shame, and combat feelings of loneliness. So, it’s necessary for sex education to validate asexual people’s choices and feelings by informing their peers of the spectrum and reality of asexuality. Doing this would prevent other young ace people from feeling isolated as well as ensure ace students aren’t put into harm’s way due to ignorance that could be easily rectified through proper education.

    Ebony Purks is a recent college graduate with a bachelor’s degree in English with a concentration in professional writing. She is currently a freelance writer and Junior Life Editor at The Tempest. Ebony specializes in writing about pop culture, social justice, and health, especially examining the many intersections between those subjects. Though when she’s not writing, she’s rewatching her favorite comfort shows or excessively tweeting.

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    The post Sex education courses need to include asexuality appeared first on Wear Your Voice.

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  • Miguel Cardona confirmed as education secretary

    Miguel Cardona confirmed as education secretary

    Cardona, 45, has also worked as a teacher, principal, and administrator, and Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), chairwoman of the Senate Education Committee, said he is 
”exactly the leader” needed at the Department of Education during “this moment of crisis.” Cardona has “the experience, principles, and perspective that we need in this critical role,” she added.

    As education secretary, two of the biggest issues Cardona will face is how to best guide schools as they make plans to reopen and managing the government’s $1.5 trillion student loan portfolio. During his confirmation hearing, Cardona said he will also focus on inequities in the country’s education system, because unless they are “tackled head on,” they will “prevent the potential of this great country.” Catherine Garcia

    Ryan notes Biden vowed to make the crown prince’s regime “pay the price” during his presidential campaign. Now, Ryan writes, the president is “facing his first major test of a campaign promise and, it appears, he’s about to fail it.”

    “The Biden administration now seems ready to move on while proposing some sanctions falling far short of honoring Biden’s campaign promise to hold Mohammed accountable,” he says. “It appears as though under the Biden administration, despots who offer momentarily strategic value to the United States might be given a ‘one free murder’ pass.”

    Wealthy alumni are threatening to pull their donations from the University of Texas at Austin because students have been protesting the university’s controversial alma mater song, The Texas Tribune reports.

    “The Eyes of Texas,” which plays after football games, is a cherished tradition for many, but it was historically performed at campus minstrel shows, and the title is linked to a saying from Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. Students, therefore, have criticized the song as racist for a while now, the Tribune notes, but action has increased over the last year amid protests against police brutality and racial injustice.

    It appears, however, many donors consider the movement to be the product of “cancel culture” and “Marxist ideology,” and emails obtained by the Tribune show they’re willing to pull their financial support for the university over the issue. UT-Austin President Jay Hartzell has publicly confirmed the school will keep the song, but the emails suggest they want him to take an even stronger stand. A few donors even called for Black students to leave the university if they didn’t appreciate the tradition.

    “It’s time for you to put the foot down and make it perfectly clear that the heritage of Texas will not be lost,” one donor whose name was redacted wrote to Hartzell. “It is sad that it is offending the blacks. As I said before the blacks are free and it’s time for them to move on to another state where everything is in their favor.”

    Larry Wilkinson, a donor and 1970 graduate of UT-Austin, argued in an email to Hartzell and an interview with the Tribune that because Black students make up only 6 percent of the student body, “the tail cannot be allowed to wag the dog … Nothing forces those students to attend UT-Austin.” Read more at The Texas Tribune. Tim O’Donnell

    One of the more worrisome bubbles, per Politico, comes in the form of special-purpose acquisition companies, also known as SPACs or “blank check companies.” They exist with the goal of acquiring private companies, generally intriguing startups, and taking them public without having to go through the normal initial public offering process. Larry Kudlow and Wilbur Ross, both former Trump administration officials, are setting up their own SPACs, as is former NBA superstar Shaquille O’Neal.

    Joseph Brusuelas, the chief economist at at the consulting firm RSM US, said the SPAC bubble, along with cyber assets and gold, feels particularly high-risk. “I mean Shaq has a SPAC,” he told Politico. “What could go wrong?”

    Politico also lists the “huge surges” in cryptocurrencies as something that has market watchers concerned. Bitcoin is probably the most famous example in this category, and it’s up 420 percent over the last year, but other cryptocurrencies like Dogecoin, which Politico notes was “created as a joke based on an internet meme,” are also skyrocketing. And the real estate market could be vulnerable, too; data from Realtor.com showed median home listings are up 14.5 percent over the last year, marking the 28th straight week of double-digit price gains.

    A recent survey of institutional investors carried about by the investment management firm Natixis seems to back up those fears, since 41 percent expect a market correction in real estate prices, and 39 percent are anticipating corrections for cryptocurrencies. Read more at Politico. Tim O’Donnell

    This content was originally published here.

  • Higher Education: Will MU Become Marquette Tech?  » Urban Milwaukee

    Higher Education: Will MU Become Marquette Tech? » Urban Milwaukee

    Looking west down W. Wells St. at Marquette’s Campus Town Apartments. Campus Town East is the most visible. File photo by Jeramey Jannene.

    Marquette University has been rocked with controversy over budget cuts and staff layoffs. The impact of COVID-19 and a projected decline in future student enrollment due to a declining birthrate have been used to justify dramatic cuts, as a story published by Urban Milwaukee reported. The layoffs for next school year were projected to be as high as 225. Today the number has dropped to 39, but the changes may be more sweeping than the mere number of positions cut.

    Marquette President Mike Lovell, in a letter to “Marquette colleagues,” was careful to note the 39 staff “do not involve any tenured or tenure-track faculty losing their positions,” but some of those colleagues believe the justifications for staff and budget cuts just don’t add up. Marquette will run a budget surplus next year, perhaps greater than the proposed cuts. Critics believe Marquette’s leadership is using the crisis as an opportunity to restructure the university while blaming the pandemic.

    So worried was law professor and rector of the Jesuit community,

    “There are rumors,” said one professor who wished not to be identified, “that the Jesuit community was told by the provost [Kimo Ah Yun] and the president [] a couple of years ago that they want to turn Marquette into the first Jesuit technical university, to retreat from their liberal arts focus, to focus on things like healthcare and the STEM fields… They had a lot of resistance on the part of the Jesuit community to their plans to cut liberal arts programs.”

    Again, these are only rumors, but they match actions by the Marquette administration. While cuts are being made in the humanities and liberal arts, the administration is planning for increases in nursing, business, and other technical fields. The long-term plan for Marquette may not be to shrink the university at all, just realign it. Administration may believe enrollment is a zero-sum situation: If the university increases technical fields, it must cut elsewhere.

    Chris Gooding, professor of theology, says the administration is using semantical language to obscure the cutting of staff positions. “They are about to do a purge of visiting assistant professors and adjuncts.” But these cuts will not be called layoffs, just a nonrenewal of contracts. 240 class sections will be eliminated, mostly in the humanities and liberal arts. Tenured and tenured-track professors will pick up more classes.

    Part of the draw for Marquette, believes Gooding, is a well-rounded academic experience. “If they cut the humanities significantly,” he asks, “why would you spend some $40,000 a year to come to Marquette [for nursing] if you are going to get the same education at UWM for a fraction of the price?”

    Faculty have called for an open and honest dialogue concerning the future of Marquette. A resolution passed by Marquette’s University Academic Senate in February 2021 noted that the President and Provost did not follow the shared governance with the Marquette community as required by the statues of the Academic Senate. The lack of transparency has led to increased mistrust.

    President Lovell’s

    Joshua Kim and Edward Maloney in their 2021 book, Learning Innovation and the Future of Higher Education, advocate for reimagining higher education. Kim directs criticism at Marquette in a December 14, 2020 article, “The Misuse of Demographics as Justification for Faculty and Staff Cuts” in Inside Higher Ed. Kim quotes Marquette Provost Kimo Ah Yun, “We do not want to build a university in the hopes that students will come.” But Kim believes that such cuts may box in a university like Marquette. “Cutting faculty and staff jobs will make it more difficult, not less, to make these adjustments,” Kim argues.

    Sergio M. González, a professor of history and Latinx Studies at MU, notes the MU provost admitted the pandemic was not driving the changes at the university: “At an Academic Senate meeting, the provost gave a presentation, and he explicitly stated, in a real turnabout in what we had been told the last few months, that demographic shifts and COVID were not the justification for these proposed cuts. That, in fact, the cuts and the restructuring of the university are a part of much larger structural issues that the university faced.”

    Marquette may be narrowing its vision to high demand, technical and professional fields because it believes it must follow market forces and give students what they want. But Marquette may in the process lose some luster for students looking for a broader academic and personal experience. The future as foreseen by the provost and president may not guarantee that students receive a unique Jesuit education.

    (Marquette’s Media Center was contacted to request any comments from the MU administration. No response was given.)

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    This content was originally published here.

  • Commentary: Tim Scott has right premise, wrong solutions on education

    Commentary: Tim Scott has right premise, wrong solutions on education

    In his recent commentary, “Why I’m voting against Biden’s nominee for education secretary,” U.S. Sen. Tim Scott is right on the money with his observations that “education is a great equalizer” and that “education is our generation’s civil rights issue.” While one would be hard-pressed to find any American who would disagree with this premise given the challenges facing our nation and its PK-12 public education system, the policy prescriptions of charter schools, public money for private schools, privatization and private school choice he lauds can result in outcomes that are contradictory to these goals and values.

    For one, the option of private school choice, one of the approaches that Sen. Scott, R-S.C., views as commonsense solutions to school reform, can hardly be seen as one that truly equalizes educational opportunities or reflects civil rights ideals. School choice leads to capital, both financial and human, being funneled away from our traditional public schools, leaving behind an oasis of underachievement at schools surrounded by impoverished communities where there is a lower tax base to support education.

    Further, in direct contradiction to the ideals of civil rights and the goals of the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision handed down by the U.S. Supreme Court, school choice results in de facto segregation occurring as a result of custom, circumstance or personal choice as opposed to segregation sanctioned by law. Leading scholars in the field such as Gary Orfield of The Civil Rights Project at UCLA have expressed concerns about the re-segregation of public education in the post-Brown era that is the result of shortsighted polices such as private school choice.

    In recent years, many parents, educators and policymakers in education have begun to question whether the Brown decision has had a substantive or symbolic impact on racially desegregating or providing quality education equity. Leaving behind students of color in broken, under-resourced public school systems that still face challenges escaping that system even with private school vouchers, often due to issues associated with proximity and transportation, is not a true reflection of equalization in education or the ideals or intentions of civil rights.

    School reform policies Sen. Scott contends are commonsense approaches to improving our education system, such as charters, using public funding to support religiously affiliated private schools and privatization, undermine goals associated with greater equity in PK-12 education because the end result is general resources are taken away from traditional public schools. This weakens our traditional public education system with less money available to support public schools given the funneling of public money to support private education. It is a deeply flawed assertion when policymakers argue that these approaches to school reform can serve as an incentive for public schools to improve. How can they be expected to improve when these policies undercut critical resources needed to enhance our traditional public education system?

    Recent state legislation, such as H.3589, S.208 and a current education savings account bill offering some $6,500 for private school education, are laying the groundwork for these approaches to school reform that pose challenges for traditional public education. True education reform that adheres to the goals and values of equity and civil rights is not advocating for more charter schools, private school choice, public funding for religiously affiliated private schools and privatization.

    Rather, school reform resulting in greater choice and innovation can be achieved by researching and implementing best practice models for quality public education such as the creation of community schools. As a society we cannot afford to turn our backs on traditional public education where the majority of Americans were educated during their formative years. Supporting and investing in this system is paramount to achieving greater equity and honoring principles associated with civil rights.

    Kendall Deas, Ph.D., is a professor of education policy and law at the College of Charleston and a director of the Quality Education Project.

    This content was originally published here.

  • Survey: COVID-19’s effect on education according to teachers | World Economic Forum

    Survey: COVID-19’s effect on education according to teachers | World Economic Forum

    • While COVID-19 continues to keep lessons online, the majority of teachers agree that remote learning is a poor substitute for the classroom.
    • A new survey by McKinsey shows how teachers view the effect of COVID-19 on their students.
    • The majority of teachers feel their students learning has suffered, and that the attainment gap between public and private school students has widened.
    • There’s also concern among educators that the stress and isolation from online learning is contributing to mental health issues among young people.

    While the education response to the COVID-19 pandemic has varied widely, teachers agree on the high cost of remote learning, especially for vulnerable students.

    Although teachers around the world have different styles and standards for learning, there is one thing on which they seem to agree: a computer is no match for a classroom as a place for kids to learn. While many continue to teach students online because of the COVID-19 pandemic—and may be understandably reluctant to return to in-person instruction until they feel safe—the majority of those polled in a new McKinsey survey said that the remote learning experienced over the past year is a poor substitute for being back in the classroom. We asked teachers in eight countries to rate the effectiveness of remote learning when it was first rolled out in response to school shutdowns between March and July of 2020. They gave it an average score of five out of ten.1 The grades were especially harsh from teachers in Japan and the United States, where nearly 60 percent rated the effectiveness of remote learning at between one and three out of ten. That barely beats skipping school altogether. While the quality and support systems around remote learning have likely improved since the start of the pandemic, this is still a striking indictment.

    COVID-19 has induced the largest remote learning experiment in history. Faced with a deadly threat, policy makers had to make decisions in the face of significant scientific uncertainty. While legitimate public health concerns led to school closures, our research suggests that students have paid a heavy price in lost learning. There is also emerging evidence that the stress and isolation of online learning is contributing to mental health issues among young people. Remote classes have improved as schools adopt best practices but remain difficult for students who struggle with issues such as learning challenges, isolation, or a lack of resources.

    In this article, we examine the impact of remote education on student learning through the perspective of teachers on the front lines who see the results every day. Few players are more important in deciphering the long-term impact of this protracted learning experiment. Teachers have a deep firsthand knowledge of what their students are absorbing in class—real or virtual—in a way that parents and policy makers can’t always measure. From missed assignments to falling test scores, teachers see the disengagement and learning loss, the effects of which could hurt the economic wellbeing of some students for life. Many also know from experience what factors can help children catch up in academic performance.

    A tale of many models

    When COVID-19 first became a global pandemic, in March 2020, most school systems were quick to react. Taking a page from playbooks created during previous influenza outbreaks, systems worldwide began closing down schools. By mid-April, UNESCO estimates, 1.6 billion children were no longer being taught in a physical classroom.2 By the time students in the Northern Hemisphere returned to school in the fall, though, the consensus was more divided. Some systems decided to bring the majority of children back to school in person, while others started the new school year remotely.

    What changed? To start, many school systems developed protocols that allowed for safer in-person and hybrid learning. Public health data also indicated that children were less likely than adults to be vulnerable to COVID-19 and possibly less likely to spread the virus.3 Moreover, projections based upon historical data about learning loss during school holidays raised concerns that the toll on learning was already high. By late August, organizations and publications from the American Academy of Pediatrics to the Economist were calling for students to return to the classroom. The World Health Organization released guidelines stating that school closures should be “considered only if there are no other alternatives.”4 Whether leaders decided to heed that call depended on a number of factors, from infection rates to resources and popular pressure. In most countries, though, the decision to open schools appeared to be as correlated with GDP as with infection rates (Exhibit 1).

    School status appears to correlate to GDP.

    Policy responses at the time teachers were surveyed can be roughly divided into four archetypes:

    • Asia stabilizing: With COVID-19 rates in Australia, China, Japan, New Zealand, and South Korea as low as a single daily case per 100,000 people at the time of our survey, students in these countries had mostly returned to school.
    • Europe prioritizing returning to school: Although caseloads throughout Europe were rising daily in late October—by up to 60 new cases per 100,000 people in France, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United Kingdom—leaders publicly and repeatedly prioritized teaching kids in the classroom.
    • North America partially open: While school officials in Canada and the United States spent their summer planning for hybrid learning, rising infection levels prompted many large US districts to start the academic year remotely. By November, these decentralized education systems were a patchwork of remote, hybrid, and in-person instruction, with many children remaining fully remote.
    • Latin America and Africa hunkering down: With the exception of Tanzania, most low-income countries in Africa and Latin America started the school year remotely. By November, a number of schools in Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, and Uganda had brought students back to the classroom through hybrid models, while rising rates in Latin America prompted most system officials to keep students at home.

    Since November, this picture has continued to evolve, with many European countries shutting down schools in response to spiking cases and new variants emerging over the holidays. While those responses will continue to evolve as the pandemic shifts and vaccines are distributed, the challenges of remote learning are likely to persist.

    Reports from the virtual classroom

    In an effort to understand the impact that these policy choices are having on students’ learning experiences, we surveyed teachers in Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States between late October and early November of 2020. Along with enabling a more apples-to-apples comparison, we limited this initial survey to leading OECD countries (plus China) for practical reasons: data are much harder to come by in many low- and middle-income countries. Research by McKinsey and others suggests that learning loss in those countries could be much worse. This survey, therefore, is probably a best-case scenario, offering perspectives from professionals who are more likely than many of their peers in other markets to have the resources, support, and health safeguards that enable them to teach in any setting.

    Our previous research indicates that the impact of a school closure on academic outcomes is tied to how long the closure lasts. For that reason, we asked teachers to reflect on their experiences during the first few months of the pandemic, when most had a significant degree of exposure to remote learning in the countries we surveyed. We asked teachers to rank the effectiveness of remote learning on a scale of one to ten, with one being least effective, resulting in little to no academic progress, and ten meaning the instruction was at least comparable to what students would normally learn in a classroom—perhaps even better.

    While teachers gave low marks to remote learning across the board, teachers in Australia, Canada, and Germany gave it higher ratings than their peers in other markets. Around one-third of respondents in those countries felt that remote learning was almost as effective as being in class. In Japan, by contrast, only 2 percent of teachers felt that online classes were comparable to learning in person; most felt it was much worse (Exhibit 2).

    Techers viewed remote working as less effective.
    Image: McKinsey&Company

    Resources make a difference. Teachers who taught at public schools gave remote learning an average global score of 4.8, while their peers in private schools, which often have better access to learning tools, averaged a rating of 6.2. There is obviously a wide variation in resources for students and teachers in public schools, too. Teachers working in high-poverty schools found virtual classes to be especially ineffective, rating it 3.5 out of 10, bolstering concerns that the pandemic has exacerbated educational inequalities. Teachers in wealthy and private schools were also more likely to report that their students were well equipped with internet access and the devices required for remote learning, which may explain why their students were also most likely to log in and complete assignments (Exhibit 3).

    Teachers in high-poverty schools found virtual classes to be especially ineffective, bolstering concerns that the pandemic has exacerbated educational inequalities.

    The attainment gap between private and state schools has widened.
    Image: McKinsey&Company

    What can we learn about student learning?

    Given the ongoing shutdowns and the cumulative impact of learning loss, it is too early to fully assess the pandemic’s impact on student learning. Most countries suspended their usual year-end assessments and examinations at the end of the last school year, and some also chose to forgo regular formative assessments when students returned to class. Many also tweaked the format and pacing of remote classes to increase learning. That said, studies from several countries suggest that school shutdowns in the second quarter of 2020 put students up to six months behind the academic milestones their cohorts would typically be expected to reach. Losses were greater in math than in reading, and disadvantaged populations experienced more severe setbacks in all subjects (see sidebar, “Estimating the pandemic’s toll on learning”).

    Along with the academic setbacks, research from McKinsey’s Center for Societal Benefit through Healthcare and elsewhere points to a decline in students’ mental health and physical fitness. None of these studies, however, deployed the same methodology to look across multiple countries, making international comparisons difficult. Our teacher survey is a first step toward filling that gap.

    Teachers reported that students were an average of two months behind at the time of the survey, with low-income and at-risk students suffering higher setbacks in every market. The degree of loss varied significantly among countries. Japan reported the lowest losses, with less than a month of learning lost.

    While this may be partially because Japan resumed in-person learning sooner than many of the other countries in our sample, another contributing factor could be the frequent use of extracurricular learning programs, otherwise known as “cram schools,” prior to and during the pandemic. Teachers in the United Kingdom, by contrast, reported an average loss of nearly three months. Approximately one-quarter of teachers in Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom said that their students were more than four months behind where they should be as of November; in China and Japan, fewer than 2 percent of teachers felt the same way. Indeed, 35 percent of teachers in Japan said their students are still on track, as did 15 percent of those in China. In every other country, fewer than one in ten teachers said their students are on track (Exhibit 4).

    COVID-19 has caused students to fall up to two months behind.
    Image: McKinsey&Company

    Even relatively short stints of remote learning came at a cost (Exhibit 5). Moreover, life in the classroom has changed because of the pandemic. Among other things, most schools have implemented physical distancing, simultaneous remote instruction, and health safeguards that limit both teacher–student and peer interactions. Many students are also dealing with added trauma, including economic dislocation, hunger, and mental health challenges—all of which clearly affect learning, regardless of how it takes place.

    Even small closures have a big impact.
    Image: McKinsey&Company

    The survey indicates that some segments of the student population have been hit especially hard. Teachers in all countries reported slightly higher learning loss for younger grades (2.2 months for kindergarten through third grade versus 1.7 months for ninth through 12th grade). Economic status matters, too. Teachers in schools where more than 80 percent of students live in households under the poverty line reported an average of 2.5 months of learning loss, compared with a reported loss of 1.6 months in schools where more than 80 percent of students live in households above the poverty line.

    Those results are broadly consistent with research at the national level. In the United States, teachers reported that students were 2.4 months behind expected milestones in November, while October assessment results found students to be 1.5 months behind in reading levels and 3 months behind in math skills. In Australia, local teacher surveys suggested just over a month of loss; respondents to our survey put the total at 1.6 months. In the United Kingdom, local teacher surveys reported 3 months of learning loss in July, while ours found it to be 2.8 months. That said, our survey measures only the initial toll on learning. Students have likely fallen further behind as schools remain shut. What’s more, learning loss also often compounds over time. Some schools in Pakistan closed for 14 weeks after the 2005 earthquake, for example. Four years later, students attending those schools were 1.5 years behind peers in unaffected regions.

    Students in low- and middle-income countries could be hit especially hard. School shutdowns have, on average, been longer in those countries, where governments have had less capacity to roll out remote learning. Unless addressed, learning loss and declining school enrollment will likely result in significant delays in achieving the UN sustainable development goal of ensuring universal primary and secondary education by 2030—not to mention higher costs in trying to get students the help they need to catch up.

    The full impact of this unprecedented global shift to remote learning will likely play out for years to come. For students who have lacked access to the tools and teachers they need to succeed academically, the results could be devastating. Some may drop out of school early; others may lack the skills they need to progress to the next level of learning. Although formal educational achievement is only one component of success in life, it is strongly correlated with higher earnings and better life outcomes. Moreover, the demand for advanced skills and degrees is increasing.

    The full impact of this unprecedented global shift to remote learning will likely play out for years to come.

    The long-term impact of the pandemic will of course depend on the steps that school-system leaders take now to mitigate and address the damage that’s being done. A critical first step is to improve the quality of remote learning for those students who are still learning virtually. But students will also need help to catch up losses that have already occurred. Along with offering more support for students who are behind—through high-density tutoring or more personalized mastery-based programs—students may need to spend extra time in the classroom. That could mean longer school days or vacation academies during holidays. Given the breadth and scope of learning loss, there could be a compelling case for a systemic solution as part of the recovery.

    What is less compelling is a return to the status quo. The pandemic has widened achievement gaps and exposed weaknesses in school systems around the world. Educators have an opportunity now to reimagine a more equitable and resilient K–12 education system that delivers a better education to all children. The school systems that invested in recruiting talented teachers and helping them succeed prior to the crisis may turn out to be the most effective at minimizing learning loss. They recognize the need to support not only students but also students’ families, especially in vulnerable communities.

    Education systems worldwide are at a critical inflection point. Along with the staggering cost to human lives and livelihoods, the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated trends that are reshaping the skills and demands that today’s students will need to meet. The war for talent is likely to intensify. Standing on the front lines of that battle are the teachers. In this survey, many expressed a clear belief that children learn best from people, not programs. Every day, teachers see the difficult challenges remote learning presents to their students but also the opportunities that virtual classrooms offer to connect in new ways.

    With resources, support, and evidence-based strategies to guide them, teachers will be critical in helping children recover from this pandemic to become the doctors, scientists, and teachers who will protect us from future disasters.

    This content was originally published here.

  • Just 1 in 6 Indiana college students who study education become teachers, report finds

    Just 1 in 6 Indiana college students who study education become teachers, report finds

    Algebra teacher Jessica Edwards helps students with math problems during her 9th grade algebra class at Smoky Hill High School in Aurora, Colorado.
    Of the roughly 11,000 students who pursued bachelor’s degrees in education, just 16% eventually received licenses and found jobs in Indiana public schools. 

    Only 1 in 6 students who pursued bachelor’s degrees in education at state colleges and universities ended up working as teachers, according to a new report on Indiana’s teacher pipeline that followed students who entered college from 2010 to 2012.

    The outcomes were even starker among students of color: Just 5% of Black students who entered education programs went into teaching in Indiana classrooms, according to the study from the Institute of Education Sciences, the research arm of the U.S. Department of Education.

    The report followed students enrolled in education programs at Indiana’s public colleges and universities to see how many received degrees, were licensed, and got jobs in teaching.

    Of the roughly 11,000 students who pursued bachelor’s degrees in education, just 16% eventually received licenses and found jobs in Indiana public schools.

    Indiana schools have struggled to fill vacancies in recent years as a strong economy created jobs in other industries. Teacher pay in Indiana lags behind that of neighboring states and behind salaries of other professional careers — a problem that has attracted attention from politicians and advocates on both sides of the aisle.

    Schools are particularly struggling to hire more teachers of color and to fill positions in high-demand areas such as special education and math.

    “This is a treasure trove of information, which prompts us to say, ‘We have a problem. Let’s figure out what the problem is,’” said Indiana Commissioner for Higher Education Teresa Lubbers.

    “If the problem is we don’t have enough people interested in education or enough diversity in education, then we need to find out why,” she said.

    Gathering more information is crucial for tackling those challenges, Lubbers said. Some students could be dropping out of college because it is not affordable, for example, while others could be switching to other majors.

    The study did not look at other routes to the classroom. Many Indiana teachers pursue alternative teacher licensing pathways, which are open to college graduates who have not completed a university teaching degree program.

    Black and Latino college students were especially likely to leave before landing in classrooms, according to the report. Of the students the study had demographic data for, students of color made up 12% of those pursuing education degrees but just 6% of those licensed. That’s a worrying trend because research has shown that having teachers of color improves outcomes for students of color.

    About 34% of Indiana students are Black, Hispanic, Asian, or other children of color. But the state’s teaching force is overwhelmingly white, and just 8% of Hoosier teachers are people of color.

    Another reason for the wide gap is because Black and Hispanic high school graduates are less likely to enroll in college and less likely to graduate, according to data from the Indiana Commission for Higher Education, so the pool of potential teachers is smaller.

    The state is already pursuing policies to boost diversity, Lubbers said, pointing to programs for Black and Hispanic college students such as scholarships and student-teaching stipends.

    “There are things that we’re doing. It’s just that it’s not enough yet,” Lubbers said.

    Advocates say that improving teacher diversity in Indiana’s schools will take a multipronged approach.

    Blake Nathan, CEO of the Educate ME Foundation, an organization dedicated to increasing the number of teachers of color, said that college students of color could face many hurdles that make it harder for them to become teachers, including concerns about incurring student debt and then entering a relatively low-paying field.

    Some college students of color may be prevented from teaching because of state licensing requirements, Nathan said. To earn licenses, prospective teachers must meet grade point average requirements and pass tests that Nathan said put candidates of color at a disadvantage and should be studied for bias.

    “It needs to be a statewide initiative to support more teachers of color,” Nathan said.

    This content was originally published here.

  • Tim Scott: Why I’m voting against Biden’s nominee for Education secretary

    Tim Scott: Why I’m voting against Biden’s nominee for Education secretary

    Following a year defined by tragedy, uncertainty and the pain of living through a pandemic, I did not expect that I would have to defend the educational opportunities of millions of struggling children and their parents during a confirmation hearing for Miguel Cardona, President Joe Biden’s nominee for secretary of education.

    Education is the closest thing to magic we have in America: It is the great equalizer and our generation’s modern civil rights issue. Yet it seems that just weeks into his presidency, instead of uniting the country, President Biden is rallying behind the hardly uniting principles of far-left progressivism. The latest in this progressive wish list: listening to teacher unions over parents, dismantling successful, commonsense education reform measures such as charter schools and private-school choice and sending mixed signals on reopening schools nationwide.

    I am willing to work in good faith with Cardona to help the millions of poor kids, like I was, have a fighting chance at the American dream. Ideally, Cardona would be setting the education agenda for the Biden administration. But the reality is, Biden will be dictating his agenda to Cardona. Unfortunately, it is not his Connecticut policies that he will be championing as Biden’s education chief, it is the president’s union-focused progressive policies. And because of that, I voted against his confirmation.

    I have great respect for Cardona’s background — we share similar life stories that have shaped who we are and have brought us from poverty to the highest levels of public service. And while I commend him for his personal success, if Cardona follows the Biden plan to pit teacher unions against parents and students, our kids will never get the education they truly deserve.

    As a member of the U.S. Senate Education Committee, I know that true education reform must include charter schools, public funding for Catholic and other religiously affiliated schools, COVID-relief for nonpublic schools and the bipartisan District of Columbia Opportunity Scholarship program, which has opened the doors for kids in our nation’s capital to climb the ladder of success. In a time when too many of our students lack access to quality education or are trapped in failing schools, we must pave the way for greater choice and innovation for learning.

    But not everyone feels the same way. Elites in Washington have had the luxury to send their children to private schools when they think their assigned school is not good enough. In fact, President Biden and his family, former President Barack Obama and his children, House Democratic Whip James Clyburn, Speaker Nancy Pelosi and so many others who refuse to support options for students and parents all benefitted from private and parochial schools.

    Get a weekly recap of South Carolina opinion and analysis from The Post and Courier in your inbox on Monday evenings.

    It smacks of hypocrisy that those policymakers who block the poorest Americans from reaching those educational dreams have paid for their children to reach theirs. And if the wealthy elites decide against private school, they can just move into a better house, in a better district, with better public schools. This “do as I say, not as I do” mentality is pervasive in our government today.

    Kids from low-income families in both rural and urban areas deserve a chance at reaching their full potential. They need to see success, not suffer the status quo. The pandemic has strained already-failing schools and left millions of students in virtual learning. And on top of that, teacher unions continue to silence the voices of scientists, parents and reasonable people who support the safe return of students to classrooms.

    The answer is not to just throw good money after bad, but to reform the foundations of our system. Charter schools and private-school choice incentivize our traditional public schools to do better and has been a lifeline for millions of students to escape failing schools.

    Parents deserve to have a larger and louder voice in the conversation, but I am not convinced that this administration is interested in hearing them. The Biden administration, and the education policies implemented by Cardona, must put students and parents first, and I will do everything I can to hold them accountable for their decisions.

    Tim Scott is a Republican senator from South Carolina. He grew up in North Charleston. 

    This content was originally published here.

  • Black History Month 2021: Celebrations and Education

    Black History Month 2021: Celebrations and Education

    This year Black History Month looks a little different, with few in person events. But that didn’t stop me from compiling a list of local events/activities to share with you that our family will be exploring during the month. I’ve also included some educational resources that your family can use to learn about, celebrate and honor the heritage of African Americans.

    OKC Thunder Black Heritage Creative Contest
    Deadline for submission: Feb. 15, 2021
    Student art competition open to students in grades 9 – 12 (public, private, home schooled). Students are tasked with creating an original poster depicting “an inspirational experience, moment or individual in Black History” and describing how they have been personally inspired.

    A Place for All People: Introducing the National Museum of African American History and Culture
    Opens February 2 – May 31, 2021
    Oklahoma Territorial Museum and Carnegie Library
    406 East Oklahoma Avenue in Guthrie, OK.
    This museum in Guthrie will be showcasing a poster exhibit that includes items from the National Museum of African American History and Culture as well as items donated by African American families from the Guthrie area.

    “Life at Hunter’s Home: Voices of Enslaved People” (Virtual Exhibit)
    Opens February 4
    $10 for full-access to the Facebook group for the month of February.
    “Hunter’s Home in Park Hill will commemorate Black History Month with programming that gives voice to the enslaved residents of the home. February programming will feature many of the people who lived and performed slave labor on the plantation, such as Susan, Ike, Nelson, Eliza, and many others who made their lives at Hunter’s Home in the years before the Civil War.”

    “Blacks on the Oklahoma Frontier: Lawmen, Outlaws, Cowboys, Cowgirls, and Rodeos,” (Virtual Event)
    February 6 at 6 p.m
    This film festival features “African American pioneers on the Oklahoma frontier. Also included in the festival will be video footage of local rodeos and Round-Up Clubs featuring Black cowboys and highlighting rodeos from historically all-Black towns in Oklahoma. 
    .
    Oklahoma Education Association
    On this website you will find a collection of classroom resources for all ages to support Black History Month curriculum in the state of Oklahoma.

    OU Health Sciences Center Book Drive Throughout February
    The Office of Diversity and Inclusion will be hosting a book drive the whole month of February. All of the donations will go to local schools here on the Northeast side of OKC. Donation boxes are located on the first floor of the DLB Student Union and by the circulation desk in the Bird Library.

    Metropolitan Library System
    The local library system has a series of take home kits, virtual exhibits and Black author visits.

    Kids Take Over the Cowboy: Black History Month in the West
    February 6, 2021
    Times: 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM
    Location: National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum
    1700 NE 63rd St., Oklahoma City, OK 73111
    Price: Free for members or with Museum admission.
    “In honor of Black History Month, learn about a few of the many contributions by Black people to the West and Western history. Try your hand at roping, talk to Bill Pickett about his unique method of taking down a steer and enjoy storytime at 10:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. Activities available while supplies last. Free for members or with Museum admission.

    Art Council of Oklahoma City
    Black History Month Celebration with Art Moves
    ACOKC Facebook page at 12:00 p.m.
    All month long “Art Moves will be celebrating Black History Month by showcasing some of the amazing talents in metro’s African American community. With artists ranging from the incomparable vocals of Chanda Graham to the storytelling of Poetry and Chill, February is going to be a celebration of Black artists in OKC! Take a look at the full schedule and tune in to ACOKC’s Facebook page, weekdays at noon.”

    Oklahoma Black Museum & Performing Arts Center
    Address: 4701 N Lincoln Blvd
    The museum rotates exhibits roughly every month and features different mediums of art including photography, painting, sculpture and more.

    Virtual Family Education Opportunities

    The 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission
    This is a very in depth resource that your entire family can use to learn about this important part of Oklahoma history, especially as this is the 100 year anniversary of the tragic events that unfolded in Tulsa, OK.

    National African American History and Culture Museum
    Joyful Fridays: Black History Activity Kits
    Weekly webinar-style Zoom classes designed for kiddos ages 4 – 8 years features hands-on activities/crafting projects that can be done at home. The website provides a list of supplies, recommended books, resources and links associated with each weekly topic.

    Family Education Website
    Test out your knowledge about black history events, people and places with fun quizzes to spark awareness and education.

    Scholastic Books
    A good list of children’s/teen books about black history. The web page also includes questions for family discussion.

    A Little Something for Mamas…

    Harlem Chalkboard – W&P Painting Class
    Kamp’s 1910 Cafe, OKC
    Saturday, February 27th, 12pm-2pm.
    Tickets: $35/person
    “Harlem Chalkboard” is our rendition of Jacob Lawrence’s The Migration Series, Panel 58. In these works Lawrence focuses on the Great Migration, the exodus of African Americans from the rural South to northern and western cities beginning during World War I. View the full Series here: lawrencemigration.phillipscollection.org/the-migration-series

    This content was originally published here.

  • Tesla CEO Elon Musk donated $5 million to education group Khan Academy

    Tesla CEO Elon Musk donated $5 million to education group Khan Academy

    Through his foundation, Tesla CEO Elon Musk has donated $5 million to Khan Academy, a non-profit educational platform that provides free video tutorials and that has exploded in popularity during the global pandemic.

    Worldwide, the Kahn Academy has 120 million registered users and a library of learning content, including interactive exercises, across a variety of subjects. The educational content ranges from a “fairy tales reinvented” reading course for young children to advanced computer programming courses.

    The Kahn Academy was started in 2005 by Sal Kahn, who was initially using the platform to teach his cousin. Today, the online academy supports learners around the world, with lessons translated into three dozen languages. Khan Academy is supporting more than 100 public school districts in the United States as it responds to the unprecedented demand for remote learning during COVID-19.

    In a YouTube video expressing thanks to Musk for the donation, Kahn says the donation will help support a number of programs, helping the platform build up science content and expand early learning programs as well as make the software more engaging for students and teachers. The Kahn Academy, Kahn says, has the budget of a large high school, but aspirations to serve the globe.

    “There’s people throughout the planet who need a way to tap into their potential,” Kahn said in the video. “And I view this type of investment in what we’re doing as really foundational for us to be able to build a multigenerational institution, so that future Elon Musks of the world are also able to tap into their potential and help all of us uplevel who we are as a civilization.”

    Khan goes on to say that Musk — who is also revolutionizing travel in space with his rocket company SpaceX — has long been an inspiration. He even addresses the entrepreneur directly in the video.

    “Any time that I question myself and I say ‘Is this mission too big to actually try and educate all of humanity, I think of the incredible work that you’ve done,” Khan said.

    Musk has been described as the 21st century’s Thomas Edison and, with wealth topping $185 billion, he’s considered the richest person in the world in 2021.

    Musk distributes millions of dollars through the Musk Foundation, which funds grants for areas including renewable energy, human space exploration research, pediatric research, science and engineering education and the development of safe artificial intelligence that can benefit humanity.

    Want to learn more about the Kahn Academy? Here’s where you can find free courses on a variety of topics.

    About the Author

    Hi, I’m Brittany Anas (pronounced like the spice, anise … see, that wasn’t too embarrassing to say, now was it?) My professional writing career started when I was in elementary school and my grandma paid me $1 for each story I wrote for her. I’m a former newspaper reporter, with more than a decade of experience Hula-hooping at planning meetings and covering just about every beat from higher-education to crime to science for the Boulder Daily Camera and The Denver Post. Now, I’m a freelance writer, specializing in travel, health, food and adventure.

    I’ve contributed to publications including Men’s Journal, Forbes, Women’s Health, American Way, TripSavvy, Eat This, Not That!, Apartment Therapy, Denver Life Magazine, 5280, Livability, The Denver Post, Simplemost, USA Today Travel Tips, Make it Better, AAA publications, Reader’s Digest, Discover Life and more. Learn More.

    This content was originally published here.

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