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📰 INFECTION RATES, POLITICS, & REOPENING DECISIONS: Brookings’ Jon Valant has made explicit the disconnect between infection rates and school reopening decisions, a dynamic that should be a part of reopening coverage but often isn’t. He finds a correlation is between Trump support and in-person schooling, but “no relationship between school districts’ reopening decisions and their county’s new COVID-19 cases per capita.” That means that districts where in-person classes are not advisable are going that way, which has been widely noted. But it also means that vulnerable kids in low-infection districts are going to get more low-quality remote instruction may be required — an outcome that has not been noted widely in the coverage I’ve seen.
📰 SKIMPY AND REMEDIAL REMOTE LEARNING: Meanwhile, the bad news about last spring’s remote learning keeps coming in. “Low-income schools spent considerably more time reviewing old content,” according to the Hechinger Report. And almost all school districts — rich and poor alike — “dedicated much less time to instruction than they do in ordinary times.” How much less? The average was less than four hours a day for high schools, compared to a standard six hours. Check out Chalkbeat, too.
📰 SUMMER SCHOOL/CAMP/CHILD CARE: Looking for a good way to ground your school reopening stories and give them some specificity? One option is to check out summer school, camp, or even child care that’s been open. You might even get some great tape. Some examples of stories that have been useful in this way: Summer School Offers Peek Into Reopening Schools Amid Coronavirus Outbreak (St. Louis Public Radio), Camps that stayed open in summer of COVID could offer lessons for schools (ABC News), All eyes on summer school classes that may shed light on September opening (LoHud). Give it a try!
📰 INFECTION RATES VS. TEACHER FEARS: There are 18 states with infection rates below 5 percent, according to EdWeek, citing Johns Hopkins numbers. And yet, teachers are currently “three times as likely as other U.S. workers to say they are very concerned about workplace exposure to the virus.” Increasingly, teachers unions are talking about going out on strike if their concerns are not addressed.
📰 #EWA20 FOLLOW-UP: “As leaders of the board and staff, we were excited to share EWA’s Reporter Guide for Inclusive Coverage,” according to a recent EWA statement. “So, when we received a fair but tough question about our process for selecting the team that produced the guide… we were deeply concerned.” That’s great. The concerns around selection process behind the guide were real. But EWA has not yet released the recording of the session so other members can view it for themselves, despite several requests.
Missed some previous editions? You can see the archive of past newsletters here. Additional reporting by Colleen Connolly. |