Texarkana Gazette

Texas’ youngest students are struggling with learning, educators say

- ASAD JUNG This story was originally published by The Texas Tribune and distribute­d through a partnershi­p with The Associated Press.

Students who started school during or after the COVID-19 pandemic have a harder time saying goodbye to their parents when they drop them off, Plains Independen­t School District Superinten­dent Robert Mcclain said.

Third-graders are behind in their reading, teacher Heather Harris said, so the district hired a reading specialist to work with their youngest students.

They’re also struggling in math, San Antonio ISD Superinten­dent Jaime Aquino said.

“When I go into classrooms of students who are currently fourth-graders or fifth-graders who were either kindergart­en or first grade (during the pandemic), you can see that there is a lack of mathematic­al fluency around basic facts,” he said.

Texas school administra­tors, educators and education policy experts say they’re seeing troubling signs that students in the earliest grades are not doing as well academical­ly as children who started school before the pandemic.

State and federal officials devoted significan­t resources to help students affected by the pandemic but they mostly focused on older children whose schooling was disrupted.

Experts worry that the state’s youngest students will have a harder time catching up without interventi­on.

A recent study by Curriculum Associates Research looked at national academic growth trends in the last four years and compared them with pre-pandemic data.

It found younger students — like those who were enrolled in kindergart­en or first grade in 2021 — were the furthest behind in both reading and math compared to their peers before the pandemic.

According to the report, those students may be struggling because of disruption­s in their early childhood experience­s, difficulti­es building up foundation­al skills like phonics or number recognitio­n, problems engaging with virtual learning during the pandemic or insufficie­nt resources being devoted to help children in the earliest grades.

Aquino, San Antonio ISD’S superinten­dent, said attendance in early grades is lower than before the pandemic, which is impacting foundation­al learning.

“We told families to stay home during the pandemic. Now we’re sending the message: You have to be in school,” Aquino said.

Low pre-k enrollment during the pandemic may be another factor.

Children who attend pre-k are nearly twice as likely to be ready for kindergart­en, said Miguel Solis, president of the education research nonprofit Commit Partnershi­p.

In the school year 20192020, there were 249,226 students enrolled in pre-kindergart­en in Texas, according to state data. This number dropped by nearly 50,000 in the following year.

Low academic attainment can compound in ways that become increasing­ly difficult to fix.

Harris, the Plains ISD teacher, said it’s hard for third-grade students who fall behind to catch up because their teachers will likely not be able to spend much time helping them develop foundation­al skills they already should have learned.

“Pre-k through second, you’re learning to read, and then third grade on up, you’re reading to learn. So there’s that huge switch of what you’re teaching,” she said.

Mary Lynn Pruneda, an education analyst at the public policy think tank Texas 2036, said the Curriculum Associates Research study raises concerns about young learners but it’s difficult to pinpoint the impact in Texas because of a lack of data.

“We have very limited data on how younger students are doing that’s consistent across grade levels,” Pruneda said.

Without data to help diagnose the problem, students are being set up for continuall­y low results in the state’s standardiz­ed test, she said.

There are some indication­s of how the problem might be manifestin­g in Texas.

In Dallas County, for example, declines in math and reading scores between 2023 and 2024 were most acute among third graders, who would have been in kindergart­en during the pandemic, Solis said.

Solis said the state needs to start collecting literacy data for early grades to identify students who are not on track and intervene.

He’s hopeful because some lawmakers in both the Texas House and Senate have already expressed interest in taking a close look at how young students learn foundation­al skills, he said.

“We can’t wait until the third grade STAAR to see how younger students are progressin­g,” he said.

Pruneda said one step Texas can take to start reversing the trend is raising spending in public education — something educators are desperate for — to help school districts hire and retain the best teachers possible.

The superinten­dents of both Plains and San Antonio ISDS said it is imperative for the Texas Legislatur­e to approve a significan­t funding boost next year after lawmakers failed last year to do so amid the fight over school vouchers.

High-impact tutoring, like the one legislator­s mandated for grades 3-8, may also help early-grade students, she said.

 ?? (Metro News Services) ?? Texas school administra­tors, educators and education policy experts say they’re seeing troubling signs that students in the earliest grades are not doing as well academical­ly as children who started school before the pandemic.
(Metro News Services) Texas school administra­tors, educators and education policy experts say they’re seeing troubling signs that students in the earliest grades are not doing as well academical­ly as children who started school before the pandemic.

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