Thursday Throughput: Schooling Edition
[ThTh1] One of the biggest legacies of the pandemic may be in our schools. A bevy of results have emerged that have shown, pretty conclusively, that the last few years saw the biggest drop in learning ever measured:
The evidence is now in, and it is startling. The school closures that took 50 million children out of classrooms at the start of the pandemic may prove to be the most damaging disruption in the history of American education. It also set student progress in math and reading back by two decades and widened the achievement gap that separates poor and wealthy children.
Naturally, this has been blamed on shutting down the schools when COVID-19 emerged and switching to far less effective remote learning. Even those who think the immediate decision to close schools was defensible, given how little we knew about the virus, acknowledge the impact this has had.
But we’ve actually baked an assumption into this. And the recent results of international testing are callign that assumption into question:
Whatever my doubts about PISA’s methodology, it stayed the same from 2018-22. This means the change in scores is probably fairly reliable.
As you can see, the US did surprisingly well. France and Sweden, for example, reported keeping schools open at much higher rates than the US, but even so their test scores declined more than ours.
This fits with data suggesting that school closures had little effect on test score declines within the US. Put everything together and the evidence is pointing ever more strongly to the conclusion that COVID test declines were unrelated to school closures. The real cause of the declines, then, remains a bit of a mystery. Perhaps just overall stress from the pandemic?
One of the points I’ve been hitting lately is that we’ve underestimated just how much of a worldwide trauma the pandemic was. I don’t just mean closures; I mean everything. People getting sick is traumatic. People dying is traumatic. Not knowing what’s going to happen is traumatic. COVID skeptics lying about the whole thing is traumatic. Plagues used to be common all over the world. Now the developed world, at least, has fought them to a draw. But this was the first major plague we’d had in over a century. Is it possible that, and not school closures, is to blame for learning loss?
Looking at the data, I’m struck by the fact that the lowest learning loss was in Australia, which famously contained the pandemic until after the vaccines had come out. Taiwan and Japan, who also did amazing jobs of containing the pandemic in the early going, had learning gains. Singapore and South Korea also did well. This suggests to me that it was the pandemic itself that caused learning loss and the response to it, at most, exacerbated that.
That being said, I’m hesitant to state any firm conclusions. We’re still gathering data and there’s still a lot of work to do to figure out which educational policies minimized learning loss and which made it worse. My prior is that remote schooling was a disaster. But I’m open to the possibility that it was mostly coincident with the bigger disaster of a deadly global pandemic and that we’ve overestimated just how big an impact it had. Sometimes the obvious answer is the obvious answer. But most of the time, it’s more complicated.
All that being said, the cause of the learning loss, while interesting, is less relevant to our current situation than what we do going forward. Because no matter why the learning loss happened, it did happen. And we can’t just go back to the old ways of schooling — agendas set in Washington, unions in firm control and money pouring into Administration — and expect things to magically get better on their own.
ThTh2] Speaking of the COVID vaccines, a new massive study out of India show no association between the vaccines and sudden cardiac death. And another shows that while COVID-19 infection has a big impact on pregnant women’s babies, the vaccine has no such effect.
[ThTh3] Honeybees are known to form clusters to keep warm in cold weather. It turns out, this may be a bad thing.
[ThTh4] Little known facts about the evolution of planetary systems.
This phase of planetary evolution happens because squares are not a gravitationally stable shape. Despite being a dwarf planet, Pluto's gravity is still strong enough to slowly smooth out its early corners into the round shape we see today. Amazing to see happen in real time! 🌠https://t.co/HlaQ5Vfhht
— Celeste Labedz (@celestelabedz) December 3, 2023
[ThTh5] And speaking of the evolution of planetary systems, did one feed the apocalypse in Mad Max? Check out my latest video to find out.
[ThTh6] While I’m familiar with the phenomenon of stars destroying other stars, I’d never heard them referred to as “spider pulsars” before.
[ThTh7] The FDA may soon approve a drug that could extend the lifespans of dogs. Will this mean drugs to extend human lifespan are far behind? Maybe. Someone should write a book about what that would be look.
Oh, wait.
[ThTh8] The FDA also gave approval to home tests for chlamydia and gonorrhea, which could be a massive help with containing these diseases.
[ThTh9] What do Earthquakes sound like to the Earth?
With modern technology we can increase the frequency of the sound of earthquakes on seismometers so that the human ear can detect it. Here we can see and hear the sound of the earthquakes in GrindavĂk on November 10th. #grindavik #iceland #earthquakes @RuvEnglish pic.twitter.com/ky5xw3F5RU
— FrĂ©ttastofa RĂšV (@RUVfrettir) November 22, 2023
[ThTh10] In astronomy, the Sun is our standard by which measure things. The brightness of stars is scaled to the luminosity of the Sun. The heft of black holes is is scaled to the mass of the Sun. Even distances are scaled to the distance between the Earth and the Sun. We do these things because the Sun is one of the few celestial objects we can measure directly.
That scaling includes chemical composition. The Sun is about 75% hydrogen, 24% helium and 1% “metals”. Metals, in astronomy terms, refers to anything heavier than helium. All other objects in the universe are scaled to that (usually logarithmically). So when I saw a galaxy has an abundance of -2, that means it has 1/100th of the heavy elements the Sun does.
Of course, this assumes we know the chemical composition of the Sun. And while there’s a lot we can measure from the surface, the inner depths can only be probed indirectly. And it looks like we may have been underestimating that. It’s not that the previous results were wrong; it’s that we have new results that are even better and allow us to peek below the 5800 degrees fury of the Sun’s surface.
ThTh1: Yes, the trauma.. That’s really underplayed. Just as a lot of workplaces seem to underplay the grief people losing a loved one (or experiencing a divorce) feel, and just expect them to keep pushing and keep working, everywhere expects people to be 100% back to normal
we aren’t. I still cry more than I did in the before times. I have less ability to work sustainedly. In my students, I see similar things – more fear of uncertainty and need for regular reassurance and tendency to take the “safe” path, even beyond the fact that some of our new incoming students have zero study skills and if it seems even slightly difficult, they don’t want to try.
But it’s expected we are, and some people already seem to be forgetting the disruption. I was in a meeting with “outside evaluators” recently, where they were looking at our assessment data (I am on our general education council). And one of the well-paid outside consultants looked at us and said “your 2020 assessment data is very spotty, I don’t like that, why is that so” and luckily before I could get up and say something totally impolitic, the VP of assessment stood up and said “Respectfully, during that time we were trying to transition to teaching entirely online, where x% (I forget the number she gave) of our students had unreliable internet at their homes”
I remain gobsmacked by that guy basically saying “Gee you didn’t do everything absolutely perfectly while simultaneously trying not to die and worrying about your family members.”Report
This would never have happened if those darn Republican Trumpists hadn’t caused COVID to be such a problem! A sane, rational, scientific response would have solve the whole thing in about a week.Report
I have always believed that everyone, including the schools, deserve a mulligan for Spring 2020 before we had full understanding of what this was. In that scenario you err on the side of caution with the understanding there will be trade offs.
However I am not certain there is such a clear line between the trauma and the closing of schools as is being implied here, and the closing itself may well be the key driver of it for children. I know it varied a lot regionally but in the DC-Baltimore area schools were effectively closed for the better part of 2 years. Even where they were officially ‘back’ there were still frequent closures for outbreaks, and trailing hybrid models that kept things abnormal for a long time. Last January I was having a beer with a friend who had just started a job property managing a community theater attached to a public school, the nature of which has him effectively being part of the school’s workforce. He told me the mid term season had everyone losing their minds because no students other than the senior class had ever gone through an in person high school exam week.
Anecdotally, one of my wife’s coworkers has a daughter, for whom the word social butterfly is an understatement. She went into a steep depression during this time due not being able to be with her friends and other children. She was elementary school age, and who knows what the long term impact will be. Point is that socialization to peers and being around other people is a critical driver of development especially for small children.
Anyway, I thank God all the time that my older son was still just slightly too young to have born the brunt of it. However my esteem of public education has plummeted and I have opted for Catholic school instead, at least for K-8. The one up the street from us was open in Fall 2020 (with lots and lots of precautions, they aren’t insane). It tells me that for whatever other problems they know what the mission of a school actually is. Until I see heads rolling and a real lessons learned protocol including major reforms I don’t think I will ever be able to conclude the same about public schools again.Report
We as a nation have kind of memory holed the fact that over a million Americans died in the three year pandemic, a death toll greater than WWII.Report
For the most part pandemics always get memory holed unless they become part of popular mythology like the Black Death. How many Americans knew that there was a big flu pandemic in 1918-1919 before COVID-19. Not a lot. Most people saw the timeline as WWI, votes for women, Prohibition, and the Roaring Twenties with all that jazz. The tense years between the end of World War I and the start of the true Twenties including the Influenza Pandemic might as well never have happened. You don’t see any movies set around 1918/1919 showing people being masked.Report
I wonder how much of the so-called Lost Generation was affected, though, and maybe some of the hedonism of (some groups) in the so-called Roaring 20s was a reaction.
I know the covid pandemic changed me and I never caught the disease. Didn’t change me for the better, I can say that. Not that I’m likely to go out dancing on tables or take a couple lovers in Paris and start writing poetry….Report
I don’t think its memory holed the way you imply.
The horror of WW2 (or WW1 on the continent) is death to the youth.
What emerged, slowly at first, but conclusively relatively quickly is that the at risk population was overwhelmingly 65+. Overwhelmingly. 857k deaths out of the 1.1M (75%) you cite were in that bracket. If we drop one cohort down to 50-64 the number is 1M/1.1M or 93%.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/1191568/reported-deaths-from-covid-by-age-us/
It was precisely the eerie fact that young people were virtually unaffected that impacts the remembering of it. Which isn’t to say we should be indifferent to a wickedly virulent and lethal virus that shortens the life expectancy of the elderly; its to say that public health responses should have prioritized the elderly even more than it did.
My 85 yo uncle died of pneumonia in Jan 2020 — it was probably plain old pneumonia, given the date — and we hope his life wasn’t shortened by bad healthcare or a particularly bad strain of a virus. What we know after the fact is that the virus did accelerate death among the folks who were likely going to die of pneumonia. An horrific compression measured in a handful of years or at the oldest segment, seasons. By May 2021, according to the CDC, 79% of adults 65+ in the US were vaccinated; but statistically, the 65+ vaccination curve was completed in March 2021 (it mostly flattened after that). As of today, it is estimated that 90%+ of the 65+ cohort (51M/53M) is vaccinated.
If the deaths had been distributed any differently; if we swapped 50-64 and 65-74 with 0-17 and 18-29 putting 450k (40%) of the deaths in children/young adults? The psychic horror would be akin to WW2.
As it is, public policy for schools after March 2021 is likely they key demarcation point for analysis – bearing in mind as well that School Teachers were prioritized equally (sometimes more than, depending on the ‘First Responders’ categories) the elderly beginning in Jan 2021. And children and adults up to 50 were statistically not at risk.Report
[TT3] Bees… appropriately posted on the feast of St. Ambrose…whose symbol is bees. We tried a few seasons of keeping bees, but never had any success and gave it up. One thing about the beekeeping folks is that they will try/build anything. 3cm insulation boards (if it really helps) would likely be commercialized. The only tricky part would be wind/water proofing, access and top boards.Report
ThTh9: I will also confess I thought maybe the earthquake video was gonna be a parody where the joke was “the sound of the Earth when an earthquake hits” was the guy going “FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF[ish]” at the beginning but it was actually pretty cool. Sounds like someone practicing drums….Report
ThTh1: We were lucky. My oldest was a VERY UNHAPPY high school senior when things shut down, so he elected to drop out and get his GED. For my youngest I was able to set up an isolated “classroom” for him, complete with a window and high-speed internet, and his grades actually went up. The running joke in our house is that, being the sole extrovert, I was the only person negatively affected by the shutdown, but I look at my very introverted youngest boy, now a sophomore in college, and can’t help but connect the dots between the shutdown and his reluctance to engage more socially at his uni.Report
As a social introvert myself, I can so relate to your young man. Being 100% remote during the pandemic was so much LESS draining energetically and emotionally then being in an office, so much so that I have grown to detest my employers for requiring us to be in the office two days a week now. Your kid found his psychological nirvana during the pandemic, and has had that ripped away from him by the “normal” university setting.Report
ThTh1: If they’da ast, I coulda told them….
It’s now 30 years since I started doing serious research on real-time multi-party multi-media communication over internet protocols. Part of the work was prototyping control protocols for different settings, trying to come as close to reproducing the physical presence as possible. The one-teacher 25-student classroom was far and away the hardest scenario I looked at. At that time, all of them suffered from the lack of a decent input tablet*. All of the applications were easier to write if the network was capable of IP multicast. I still regard it as somewhat of a personal failure that I couldn’t convince the giant telecom I worked for to support multicast in their retail offerings.
* I’ve started using an iPad with an Apple Pencil for cartooning. I would have killed for that resolution and response in a device back when I was doing the research work.Report