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Where has the summer gone, friends of The Short List? It's John, and I'm here to point out that the days are getting shorter, it's almost Labor Day, and there's a smell of fall in the air. The new school year is upon us! |
It's clear that 2021-22 will be a school year like none other, thanks to the coronavirus. School districts are facing daunting challenges: |
►As schools open for in-person learning, educators are on a desperate quest to find students that went missing during the long months of at-home instruction. On average nationwide, students are about five months behind in math and four months behind in reading, according to a recent study. One big problem is a lack of good data: Few of America's largest districts can provide a clear picture of which students missed significant class time during the pandemic. |
►Just days into the new school year, thousands of kids are under quarantine in public school districts after being exposed to COVID-19. |
►Amid the push to restart in-person learning, some parents, particularly parents of color, argue that at-home learning worked better for them – and that their desires are being drowned out of the discussion. |
Colleges and universities have their own problems: |
►More than 700 colleges are requiring the COVID-19 vaccine for students or staff, but hundreds more are not. Students at these schools are meeting new – and possibly unvaccinated – roommates, just as the delta variant leads to an explosion of cases nationwide, including more breakthrough cases of fully vaccinated people. |
►Following an initial flood of interest, COVID-19 vaccination rates have slowed dramatically and young adults are among the holdouts. But some college students are working to change that. |
Stay with USA TODAY throughout the school year to learn how COVID-19 is affecting education around the country. |
There are more long reads below. Have a great weekend. |
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