These are the 4 key takeaways from the Uvalde shooting investigation report : NPR

These are the 4 key takeaways from the Uvalde shooting investigation report : NPR

Family of shooting victims listen to the Texas House investigative committee release its full report on the shootings at Robb Elementary School, Sunday, July 17, 2022, in Uvalde, Texas.

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Family of shooting victims listen to the Texas House investigative committee release its full report on the shootings at Robb Elementary School, Sunday, July 17, 2022, in Uvalde, Texas.

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When an 18-year-old gunman targeted an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, “systemic failures and egregiously poor decision making” on behalf of law enforcement and school officials failed to stop the shooter from killing 19 students and two teachers, a new investigative report found.

Hundreds of law enforcement officials prioritized their own safety over the lives of students and teachers that day as they waited more than an hour to confront the shooter, according to the 77-page report from a Texas House of Representatives committee.

After weeks of conflicting and inconsistent accounts of the police response, the report gives the public the most complete picture yet of the May 24 massacre at Robb Elementary School. As police fumbled without clear leadership or organization, school staff had grown less vigilant, straying from locked door policies and active shooter procedures.

“There were multiple systemic failures,” Rep. Dustin Burrows, a Republican member of the investigative committee, said in summarizing its findings at a press conference on Sunday, hours after the report’s release.

He warned that those breakdowns in safety aren’t just a problem that exists in Uvalde, adding, “some of the same systems that we found here that failed that day are across the entire state and country.”

Here are some of the key revelations the committee found in their probe.

A lack of leadership despite a robust police presence

In all, 376 law enforcement officers arrived at a scene that was chaotic and uncoordinated, the report says. The group of federal, state and local officials lacked any clear leadership, basic communication and enough urgency to take down the gunman, according to the committee.

Previous official accounts of the shooting placed primary blame on the school district’s Police Chief Pete Arredondo – who is on administrative leave and has since resigned from his position on the City Council — and other local police.

After arriving at the school, Arredondo fumbled around with and eventually abandoned his radio at the fence, the report stated, reasoning that one of the other sergeants was on the scene and was “fully uniformed” with a radio, he testified to the committee.

Uvalde school district’s active shooter policy called for Arredondo to be the incident commander who would’ve been responsible for leaving the building in order to organize a response and to inform other officers that he was in charge. Instead, Arredondo stayed inside the building.

Uvalde School Police Chief Pete Arredondo, third from left, stands during a news conference outside of the Robb Elementary school in Uvalde, Texas Thursday, May 26, 2022.

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Uvalde School Police Chief Pete Arredondo, third from left, stands during a news conference outside of the Robb Elementary school in Uvalde, Texas Thursday, May 26, 2022.

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After Arredondo entered the school, he went to classroom 110, which had bullet holes, but no children were inside. He then “prayed” the kids in rooms 111 and 112, where the gunman fired more than 100 rounds, had been emptied as well, he testified.

They had not been, and Arredondo proceeded to handle the incident as one of a “barricaded subject” and not an active shooter, according to the report.

“With the benefit of hindsight, we now know this was a terrible, tragic mistake,” the committee wrote.

Officers said they knew the gunman was in one of the rooms, but did not know what was happening behind the closed doors because they did not hear screams or cries, despite hearing several gunshots ringing out.

Arredondo testified that his assessment of the situation was to prevent the shooter from moving to other classrooms.

“[T]o me … once he’s … in a room, you know, to me, he’s barricaded in a room,” he said. “Our thought was, ‘If he comes out, you know, you eliminate the threat,’ correct? And just the thought of other children being in other classrooms, my thought was, ‘We can’t let him come back out. If he comes back out, we take him out, or we eliminate the threat. Let’s get these children out.”

The report revealed that most of the officers who responded to the incident were from state and federal forces, with 149 from U.S. Border Patrol and 91 from the state police department.

There were 25 city police officers and 16 from the county sheriff’s office. Arredondo’s school police force comprised five of the officers there.

The committee also faults those officers — “many of whom were better trained and better equipped than the school district police” — who it says should have filled the leadership void when they saw the chaotic scene.

“They should’ve begun asking questions and offered their support and guidance, and maybe eventually they would’ve gotten command to have a better response from that,” Rep. Burrows said.

Two officers with the Uvalde Police Department arrived at rooms 111 and 112 minutes after the attacker opened fire. The attacker shot at the officers, who were grazed by bullet fragments and retreated. They did not fire back. One left the building, the report said.

Although law enforcement made multiple missteps that disregarded active shooter training, the report says, it’s not clear that a quicker response from officers once they were on the scene could have prevented the loss of some lives.

Relaxed school security allowed the gunman to attack quickly

Although Robb Elementary had safeguards and active shooter procedures in place, school staff had developed a culture of complacency around such measures. Out of convenience, some teachers frequently left doors unlocked or propped open — a violation of school policy. Due to a shortage of keys, substitute teachers were often told to circumvent locks.

The school was also set up with an intruder alert system. But the frequency of “bailout” alerts, which flag the presence of fleeing human traffickers in the area, desensitized teachers to their urgency. No prior bailout alert had ever resulted in a violent incident at the school.

On the day of the attack, the gunman scaled a 5-foot tall exterior fence before multiple unlocked doors allowed the gunman to enter the classrooms unimpeded, the report found.

“But had school personnel locked the doors as the school’s policy required, that could have slowed his progress for a few precious minutes—long enough to receive alerts, hide children, and lock doors; and long enough to give police more opportunity to engage and stop the attacker,” it read.

Instead, the gunman likely killed most of the victims before any responder entered the building, the committee found: “Of the approximately 142 rounds the attacker fired inside the building, it is almost certain that he rapidly fired over 100 of those rounds before any officer entered.”

The gunman opened fire in his former 4th grade classroom

Reggie Daniels pays his respects a memorial at Robb Elementary School on June 9, 2022, in Uvalde, Texas. Nearly 400 law enforcement officials rushed to the mass shooting that left 21 people dead at the school, but it was more than an hour before the gunman was finally confronted and killed, according to a report from investigators released Sunday, July 17, 2022.

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Reggie Daniels pays his respects a memorial at Robb Elementary School on June 9, 2022, in Uvalde, Texas. Nearly 400 law enforcement officials rushed to the mass shooting that left 21 people dead at the school, but it was more than an hour before the gunman was finally confronted and killed, according to a report from investigators released Sunday, July 17, 2022.

Eric Gay/AP

At 11:33 a.m., the attacker spent two-and-a-half minutes firing more than 100 rounds into rooms 111 and 112.

Room 111 was the same classroom the gunman attended fourth grade, the report revealed. Just weeks before the attack, the shooter had spoken with an acquaintance about bad memories of fourth grade.

His former fourth-grade teacher, who was in the building at the time of the shooting, told the committee he reported being bullied while in the fourth grade. She consulted with the gunman’s mother, and said he eventually began making friends.

The attacker’s family testified that he continued being picked on for his clothes and speech impediment. By 2018, when the gunman was in the ninth grade, he had accumulated more than 100 absences and had failing grades. In 2021, when the attacker was 17, Uvalde High School withdrew him.

“It is unclear whether any school resource officers ever visited the home of the attacker,” the report said.

When he returned to Robb Elementary on the day of the attack, the shooter was able to enter room 111, as the door was not properly secured, according to the report. The lock on room 111 was known to be faulty, and teachers and students would often enter to use the printer.

“Room 111 could be locked, but an extra effort was required to make sure the latch engaged,” the report’s authors said.

The teacher of that classroom, who was injured during the shooting, testified that he would often be admonished by school police about the door, and notified school administration, who said a request had been submitted. The teacher never submitted a work order himself, “as was the apparent practice among Robb Elementary teachers,” the report said.

The head custodian at the school testified that he never knew of any problems with the door, or would have submitted a work order. The principal said administration had been alerted about the door in March.

On the day of the shooting, the teacher for room 111 said he could not remember receiving an alert about an active shooter or if he used extra effort to secure the door.

The attacker shot his grandmother after an altercation about his phone plan

Three minutes after the gunman fired into rooms 111 and 112, Uvalde Police Department dispatch received a call that a woman had been shot in the head, according to the report. It was the gunman’s grandmother.

Before leaving for Robb Elementary School, the gunman and his grandmother had an altercation about his phone that resulted in her making a call to AT&T to remove him from the plan, according to the report.

During the incident, he contacted a female acquaintance in Germany for an hour, and upon hanging up, texted her of his plans to harm his grandmother, the report showed.

“Ima do something to her rn,” he wrote, along with “I just shot my grandma in her head” and “Ima go shoot up a elementary school rn.”

The acquaintance initially responded with “cool,” which she deleted before saying, “I just saw the news.”

He shot his grandmother in the face before stealing her truck, despite not having a driver’s license, and drove to Robb Elementary.

She survived the attack and was released from the hospital June 29, according to CNN.

The attacker began buying firearms accessories in February, and when he turned 18 in May, spent almost $5,000 on two assault rifles and hollow point bullets, which expand upon impact.

The attacker’s uncle drove him to the gun store twice to pick up the rifles, and after his grandmother told him he couldn’t keep guns in her home, his uncle allowed him to stow one of the weapons at his house.

The gunman told an acquaintance he hid the second rifle outside of his grandmother’s home, and brought it inside the night before the massacre.

Should Robb Elementary be rebuilt? Here’s what other school shooting sites did : NPR

Should Robb Elementary be rebuilt? Here’s what other school shooting sites did : NPR

An aerial view of Robb Elementary School and the makeshift memorial for the shooting victims in Uvalde.

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An aerial view of Robb Elementary School and the makeshift memorial for the shooting victims in Uvalde.

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As funerals begin in Uvalde, Texas, a familiar debate has begun: What should be done with Robb Elementary School, the site of one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history?

Calls to demolish and rebuild the school began soon after last week’s massacre. Texas state Sen. Roland Gutierrez, a Democrat who represents Uvalde, says he has asked the federal government to provide funds to help rebuild.

“I can’t tell you how many little children that I’ve talked to that don’t want to go back into that building. They’re just traumatized. They’re just destroyed,” Gutierrez said over the weekend in an interview with local TV station KSAT.

“It needs to be torn down. I would never ask, expect, a child to have to walk through those doors ever, ever again. That building needs to gone. Taken away. Gone,” said Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin in another local TV interview.

For others in the Uvalde community, Robb Elementary is a symbol of the rich history of the town’s Mexican American residents. The school dates to an era where Mexican Americans were segregated from white residents, who mostly lived in the city’s east side and sent their children to a school there.

The children of the Mexican American families attended Robb Elementary, on the west side of the city. That community spent decades fighting to improve conditions at the school, said Ronald Garza, a one-time Robb student who now serves as a Uvalde county commissioner, and whose father George was one of Robb Elementary’s first Latino teachers.

Garza told NPR he hopes the Uvalde community can find a way to avoid a complete demolition. “I get emotional thinking about that,” he said.

Similar debates have followed other school shootings around the country. Here’s where that question stands in other places:

Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, 2018

After a shooter killed 17 students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., in February 2018, school officials closed the classroom building where the shooting took place. Students returned to class in August of that year, attending lessons in other buildings on the school’s campus and dozens of portable classrooms.

Classes now take place in a new building on campus that was constructed after the shooting and dedicated in October 2020. About $25 million in funding for its construction was provided by the Florida state legislature.

The new building is outfitted with safety features and spaces designed for reflection, WLRN reported. Its opening represented “one more step” in the Parkland community’s healing process, said Lori Alhadeff, who was elected to the school board after her daughter Alyssa was killed in the shooting.

The old building remains on campus. It has been considered a crime scene and cannot be modified or torn down until after the shooter’s trial ends. (Though he pleaded guilty in 2021, his sentencing has been repeatedly delayed. It is currently scheduled for June.)

The lobby of the new Sandy Hook Elementary School pictured before its opening in 2016.

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The lobby of the new Sandy Hook Elementary School pictured before its opening in 2016.

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Sandy Hook Elementary School, 2012

The new Sandy Hook Elementary opened in Newtown, Conn., in 2016, nearly four years after a shooter killed 20 students and six staff members in what remains the country’s deadliest shooting at an elementary, middle or high school.

In the months following that shooting, residents of Newtown called for a new school building to replace the old Sandy Hook. The old school was razed in 2013 after the town’s residents voted overwhelmingly to do so.

“It’s where we bring up our kids. It’s where our own family story plays out,” John Woodall, a local psychiatrist, told NPR in 2013. “So, to have this building be the site of this horror cuts right to the core of people’s identities.”

“They don’t want to go back, and vehemently so. For some, it was just too overwhelming to go into that space again without becoming unhinged,” Woodall said. “You can’t ask people to bear something that is, for them, unbearable.”

The new building opened in August 2016. The new school, with its colorful blinds, massive windows and warm wood tones, was designed with safety features like bullet-resistant walls and windows.

“Right from the beginning, they said they wanted it to be welcoming,” said architect Barry Svigals when asked in a 2014 NPR interview how his firm approached designing the new school. “A nurturing environment. Clearly, safety was a part of it — how could it not? And yet it was part of a learning environment that would be delightful for the children, a place where they look forward to coming and every day engaged in a joyful process of learning.”

Virginia Tech University, 2007

When a gunman killed 32 people at Virginia Tech University in 2007, most of the shooting took place inside a three-story academic building called Norris Hall.

Afterward, some in the university community called for the building to be torn down, but others were determined to reclaim its legacy.

Rather than be demolished, the wing of Norris Hall where the shooting took place was completely renovated and reopened in 2009.

Traditional classrooms were removed and replaced with study space and laboratories. The building also now houses the university’s Center for Peace Studies and Violence Prevention, a research group that studies violence and criminal justice issues.

“If Norris Hall was a boarded building, it would stick out like a sore thumb on campus for the tragedy,” engineering professor Ishwar Puri told NPR in 2009. “Instead, you walked in the hallways, you heard students mingling, you heard professors discussing research, and I think that it’s a wonderful way to honor the fallen.”

Columbine High School, 1999

When a pair of students killed 12 fellow students and a teacher at Columbine High School in 1999, there was no precedent of renovation or rebuilding to follow.

The school building remains to this day. The library where most of the shooting occurred was renovated in the years after the shooting.

In 2019, the idea of demolishing the building was raised by school district officials after a spate of people visiting the school “as a macabre source of inspiration and motivation,” prompting fears of copycat violence.

“The morbid fascination with Columbine has been increasing over the years,” wrote superintendent Jason Glass in an 2019 open letter he called “A New Columbine?” “We believe it is time for our community to consider this option.”

“The vast majority of people who come to visit Columbine are there because they have a curiosity with the site, or they view it as sort of a tourist attraction,” Glass said in a 2019 interview with NPR.

“And then we have a very small number that are actually there to do harm. So those are disturbed individuals that we are very concerned about,” he said.

But some survivors of the shooting opposed the idea, saying their healing process involves revisiting the site.

“I was heartbroken over the thought of losing it,” Columbine survivor Will Beck told NPR in 2019. “We can’t let the shooters rule our lives.”

“It’s not right,” Josh Lapp, another survivor, told NPR. “This community has had to deal with enough of a burden, to ask them to pay for this new construction isn’t fair, just because of what the shooters did.”

School district officials dropped the proposal later that year.

What are the biggest impacts of the COVID-19 shutdown on schools? : NPR

What are the biggest impacts of the COVID-19 shutdown on schools? : NPR

Pupils play at recess on an outdoor court docket at Yung Wing Faculty P.S. 124 on March 07, 2022 in New York Town.

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Students engage in at recess on an outside court at Yung Wing School P.S. 124 on March 07, 2022 in New York Metropolis.

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Two several years back this thirty day period, educational facilities closed their doorways in 185 countries. According to UNESCO, around 9 out of 10 schoolchildren all over the world ended up out of faculty. It would quickly be the most important, longest interruption in education due to the fact formal education turned the norm in wealthier countries in the late 19th century.

At the time, I spoke with quite a few specialists in the field of study identified as “education in emergencies.” They gave their predictions for the prolonged-phrase implications of college closures in the United States primarily based on the investigate on past school interruptions prompted by war, refugee crises, purely natural disasters and former epidemics.

Two many years on, educational facilities are open and masks are coming off in most places, restoring a emotion of normalcy.

So, how have these predictions played out? Let’s take a seem.

Prediction: University student understanding will suffer. Vulnerable and marginalized students will be most influenced.

Verdict: Correct

In the United States, compared with wealthy nations around the world in Western Europe and East Asia, schools ended up normally closed more time. A majority of Black, Hispanic and Asian learners stayed distant via early 2021. In the slide of 2020, enrollment dropped, driven by households who sat out pre-K and kindergarten.

All the data we have to day demonstrates learners slipping driving where by they would have been without having the interruption. As predicted, these gaps are continually even larger for lower-earnings, Black and Latino kids. This study from November identified these gaps had been greater at educational institutions that had considerably less in-man or woman understanding in the 2020-2021 school yr.

Some of the most up-to-date investigation focuses on learners understanding to examine. One particular new study in Virginia identified early reading abilities at a 20-year small this earlier drop.

In New Orleans just after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, universities were closed for a couple months, and college student learning recovered to its earlier trajectory following two total college a long time – and then improved from there. Submit-COVID restoration could acquire even for a longer time.

Prediction: A spike in the superior university dropout level and a drop in school enrollment.

Verdict: Generally Accurate

For the course of 2020, districts calm graduation necessities, and learners graduated in equivalent or even enhanced numbers in comparison with past a long time. For 2021, it was a unique tale. Details is incomplete, but Chalkbeat noted just lately that significant school graduation fees ended up trending down in most states for which they experienced facts. And district superintendents have instructed NPR they are lacking more mature students who have traded education for paid perform.

Federal data, meanwhile, clearly show college enrollment is down more than 1 million students about the earlier two many years. This is an global phenomenon that could decrease earnings about the globe by a whole of $17 trillion if not addressed, the UN predicts.

Prediction: Little ones are at danger for poisonous stress when universities shut.

Verdict: Legitimate

Faculties offer foods, safety, relationships, steadiness and hope for most small children all over the environment. Conversely, college closures are inclined to choose area in the context of substantial social upheaval. The pandemic was no exception. At minimum 175,000 kids were bereaved or orphaned in the U.S.

School and child-care closures drove mothers out of the workforce, expanding worry on them and generating economic uncertainty for young children. Govt support, these types of as the expanded youngster tax credit rating and college meals, has been inconsistent.

U.S. Surgeon Basic Vivek Murthy and the nation’s pediatricians are calling youth psychological well being a “disaster” and an “emergency.” In October 2021, instructors informed pollsters that kid’s mental wellness was their prime worry. Eighty {e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of mothers and fathers in a far more modern poll are apprehensive about their very own kids’ properly-being.

As a vibrant spot, now that matters are reopening, 97{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of universities in a federal survey say they are taking new measures to guidance scholar nicely-staying.

Prediction: School devices are occasionally completely remade.

Verdict: Jury’s continue to out.

Disaster can deliver reinvention. In New Orleans, following Katrina in 2005, community faculties had been totally changed with a controversial “portfolio district” of constitution colleges. University general performance improved as calculated by exam scores, but by the time of the COVID shutdown, the town still rated beneath the state regular . Puerto Rico, following Hurricane Maria in 2017, handed a regulation reorganizing the university program and producing charters and voucher plans. Critical understanding interruptions and impacts have ongoing.

In 2022, in the United States, we are listening to a great deal a lot more about restoration than reform. But an evident spike in home-schooling merged with a persistent downturn in enrollment in massive-town faculty districts could indicate mothers and fathers hunting for possibilities – or creating them.

Consider This from NPR : NPR

Consider This from NPR : NPR


ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

Tanesha Grant has a private lesson uncovered about education in the pandemic.

TANESHA GRANT: I’m sorry to put down this myth that in-person mastering is most effective, but which is not legitimate.

SHAPIRO: About the last two a long time, we’ve heard from a lot of mother and father desperate to get their young children back into the classroom. But for Grant’s 14-year-old son, distant education has been a silver lining in the pandemic. He is excelling, and she’s concerned about COVID. So when their school district reported just about every university student experienced to return to the classroom, she claimed no.

GRANT: The faculty has mainly been offering my son work on Google Lecture rooms. But for the marking period, you know, when we experienced the instructor father or mother meeting, you know, when I talked to his instructors, you know, a couple of them was clearly upset about the reality that my son was undertaking the do the job but would not get the credit history for the reason that he was not coming into in-individual discovering. So they’re penalizing us.

SHAPIRO: Grant lives in Harlem, N.Y., and started a team called Mothers and fathers Supporting Mom and dad back in 2000. This year the group has been advocating for a long lasting remote education option.

GRANT: A good deal of our family members are traumatized by the virus, by the pandemic. And, you know, their youngsters are knowledgeable of that. And I have kids that are telling their mom and dad, I will not want to go to faculty since I do not want to get the virus and occur property and destroy you.

SHAPIRO: And this was all just before omicron was even a factor. On Sunday New York Metropolis experienced a lot more than 5,700 new confirmed situations of the coronavirus. Now, Grant has not formally disenrolled her son from the college process, but countless numbers of dad and mom across the nation have. And quite a few of them stage to some of the exact frustrations as Grant. In New York City, college enrollment fell by about 38,000 learners final school calendar year, and they dropped one more 13,000 this year. Comparable trends are taking part in out in California…

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

KEN WAYNE: California’s general public school program is now observing much more of the detrimental outcomes of the pandemic. New figures unveiled now present a sharp fall in enrollment.

SHAPIRO: …Minnesota…

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

Unknown REPORTER #1: We can now ensure what quite a few folks now suspected. Community school enrollment dropped this calendar year in Minnesota.

SHAPIRO: …Illinois…

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

Unknown REPORTER #2: Enrollment for Chicago General public Schools dropped for a 10th straight yr. New figures…

SHAPIRO: In Chicago, dropping enrollment was previously a trouble before COVID, in accordance to Pedro Martinez, CEO of Chicago Community Educational facilities.

PEDRO MARTINEZ: Pre-pandemic, we were by now viewing enrollment drop. So what happened throughout COVID is we observed an raise in the variety of little ones that did not appear.

SHAPIRO: And lower enrollment can imply a lot less funding. Look at THIS – an NPR investigation demonstrates the drop in community college enrollment for the duration of the 1st calendar year of the pandemic was not short-term. Coming up, we’ll hear how educational institutions are seeking to gain college students again and in which some moms and dads and students are turning rather.

(SOUNDBITE OF Tunes)

SHAPIRO: From NPR, I am Ari Shapiro. It is really Monday, December 20.

It is really Contemplate THIS FROM NPR. NPR’s education and learning group invested this slide accumulating university data and interviewing superintendents to determine out what’s heading on with enrollment. Training reporter Cory Turner can take it from below.

CORY TURNER, BYLINE: NPR gathered data from hundreds of districts across the region. The resulting sample is not agent or detailed, but the figures and interviews nevertheless demonstrate some apparent designs – the huge a person that most of the districts we surveyed are even now in a pandemic enrollment hole. To comprehend why, you require to know a handful of matters about these missing students.

MICHAEL HINOJOSA: Half the youngsters we misplaced had been pre-K little ones.

TURNER: Michael Hinojosa operates the schools in Dallas, Texas, and states a lot of preschool moms and dads there merely held their kids back again past 12 months. And that’s why federal information show nationwide, preschool and kindergarten enrollment dropped 13{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} amongst 2019 and 2020. So making ready for this tumble, Hinojosa and his staff expended the spring and summer months promoting. They put up billboards with preschoolers dressed like a teacher, a police officer and a physician.

HINOJOSA: I imply, a pre-Ker with a stethoscope and a doctor’s jacket to say, look these children are likely to turn into doctors, but if they don’t arrive back again to school, they’re likely to slide further more guiding.

TURNER: And this fall, Dallas did see a bump in preschool enrollment, as did a lot of destinations, though they are nonetheless not wherever they were being ahead of COVID. The head of Chicago General public Educational institutions, Pedro Martinez, states some children are not back again this 12 months mainly because their family members enrolled them in other places – in charter educational facilities or non-public educational institutions or moved out of district. Moms and dads and caregivers required their youngsters in college comprehensive time, he suggests. And they anxious the general public universities would not be open or remain open up.

MARTINEZ: And so we saw a couple thousand learners that transferred over to personal educational institutions in the metropolis, assuring the spouse and children that they would be open in person no make a difference what.

TURNER: We also heard a great deal about more mature pupils who did not log on for distant mastering previous 12 months but failed to change educational facilities possibly. They just disappeared. Perfectly, district leaders advised us that this summertime they went on the lookout for these teenagers. John Davis, the chief of educational facilities in Baltimore, states they made use of federal reduction pounds to shell out college staff members to get in touch with learners and households and knock on doorways.

JOHN DAVIS: What you are undertaking is you’re hunting at little ones with the worst attendance in your school and conversing to the family members, like, we’re likely to be back in person – correct? – at the finish of August or September, and occur back again into whatsoever the college is, and, like, let’s do this.

TURNER: And Davis states individuals endeavours served avoid an additional big fall in Baltimore, however they, also, are not however back to their pre-pandemic enrollment. We heard about one additional challenge for colleges attempting to reconnect with older learners this drop.

LESLI MYERS-Tiny: A lot of my principals had been indicating, Dr. Little, we are losing kids. They are telling us, I have to operate, and they’re doing the job for the duration of the faculty day.

TURNER: Lesli Myers-Tiny runs the educational facilities in Rochester, N.Y., and claims numerous of these pupils are supporting their people.

MYERS-Small: We also realized that we were being fighting against survival and poverty.

TURNER: A number of superintendents told us their teams have been inquiring companies to give these teenagers afterwards hours. When that is not an possibility…

ERRICK GREENE: School does not have to happen in the hours in which they materialize appropriate now.

TURNER: Errick Greene is superintendent in Jackson, Miss., and states for college students who have to work, he’s striving to make school extra flexible.

GREENE: Late afternoon, early evening, weekends – if there is a piece of this that is asynchronous, then the world is open to us.

TURNER: And we listened to this from college leaders all around the region – that the pandemic set them again, and recovery will get additional than a yr or two, but that it has also allowed them to creatively embrace an strategy that has bothered educators for years – that it’s time to toss out the aged just one-sizing-suits-all product of faculty and to superior fulfill learners and family members wherever they’re at.

(SOUNDBITE OF Audio)

SHAPIRO: Which is NPR training reporter Cory Turner. Property education is getting a escalating preference to meet students’ wants. A prevalent narrative is that the family members that normally residence-college are white and evangelical, but Black households are progressively picking to house-college their little ones. Kyra Miles from member station WBHM reports on why some in Alabama are taking their kid’s schooling into their own arms.

KYRA MILES, BYLINE: After it established in for Didakeje Griffin that her young ones wouldn’t be heading back to community university in March 2020…

DIDAKEJE GRIFFIN: I you should not know. It was like a lightbulb instant.

(SOUNDBITE OF Mild CLICKING)

GRIFFIN: And in the long run, what I realized is that the pandemic just gave us an opportunity to do what we desired to do anyway, which is dwelling education.

MILES: Three issues manufactured Griffin decide to commence. To start with, she required to protect her youngsters from racism and bullies. She also wanted them to comprehend their cultural heritage.

GRIFFIN: And amount a few is our freedom. I want to have time to cultivate my children’s African American, their Nigerian, heritage and culture in them very first just before anybody tries to inform them who they are.

MILES: She states COVID may well have been her catalyst for dwelling education…

GRIFFIN: But it has not been the cause that we kept likely.

MILES: The Census Bureau noted that in April 2020, 3{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of Black homes dwelling-schooled their small children, and by October that same year, it was up to 16{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}. Individuals figures may well not be fully correct simply because a whole lot of kids have been mastering at dwelling in 2020, so the census clarified its survey dilemma partway through that time period. But even so, Joyce Burges, who founded the Countrywide Black Property Educators, says hundreds of people have joined that organization due to the fact 2020.

JOYCE BURGES: I feel you happen to be heading to see far more and far more dad and mom, Black mothers and fathers, house-education their little ones like hardly ever ahead of.

MILES: Dwelling education in Black homes can be its personal exclusive kind of activism. Cheryl Fields-Smith is a professor at the College of Ga. She experiments how Black moms use residence education as a variety of resistance.

CHERYL FIELDS-SMITH: We are combating the leftovers from slavery. This strategy of white supremacy and the inferiority of Black persons lingers today. We are overcoming racism by household schooling. I will not think white people can say that.

MILES: Choose school self-control – details from the U.S. Office of Training in 2014 observed that Black learners were suspended at 3 moments the level of white pupils. Jennifer Duckworth co-launched the Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham so additional house-schooling households of colour could come across and help each other.

JENNIFER DUCKWORTH: The African American and African culture, we are the tradition that has been home-education our youngsters considering the fact that the commencing, and so I sense like it truly is just in our DNA.

MILES: For a prolonged time, the nation set up barriers that designed it really hard for Black men and women to get an instruction. So understanding was constantly a group effort and hard work. Duckworth has three youngsters, and she’s been house-education them for a number of several years presently. They take part in the good deal of the Black home-education group’s pursuits, like the debate club and industry trips. The team has assisted Duckworth’s 10-12 months-outdated son Alexander (ph) make new friends.

ALEXANDER: It just feels wonderful to be around youngsters like me so you do not always have to be alone, like, the odd person out.

MILES: Last month, the group held its initially household-education summit. Duckworth says in just a few several years, the Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham has grown from two households to 70.

(SOUNDBITE OF Tunes)

SHAPIRO: Kyra Miles covers education for WBHM in Birmingham, Ala. And we also read reporting previously in this episode from NPR’s Anya Kamenetz.

You’re listening to Contemplate THIS FROM NPR. I am Ari Shapiro.

Copyright © 2021 NPR. All rights reserved. Stop by our internet site terms of use and permissions web pages at www.npr.org for additional information.

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School enrollment drops again as COVID disruption continues : NPR

School enrollment drops again as COVID disruption continues : NPR
A student goes remote, then disappears.
A student goes remote, then disappears.

The troubling enrollment losses that school districts reported last year have in many places continued this fall, as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to disrupt public education across the country, an NPR investigation has found.

We compiled the latest headcount data directly from more than 600 districts in 23 states and Washington, D.C., including statewide data from Massachusetts, Georgia and Alabama. We found that very few districts, especially larger ones, have returned to pre-pandemic numbers. Most are now posting a second straight year of declines. This is particularly true in some of the nation’s largest systems:

New York City’s school enrollment dropped by about 38,000 students last school year and another 13,000 this year.

In Los Angeles, the student population declined by 17,000 students last school year, and nearly 9,000 this year.

In the Chicago public schools, enrollment dropped by 14,000 last year, and another 10,000 this year.

“When I talk to my colleagues … across the country, there’s a lot of concern right now,” says Chicago schools chief Pedro Martinez. “Pre-pandemic, we were already seeing enrollment decline. So it wasn’t that we had stability. What happened during COVID, we just saw an increase in the number that didn’t come.”

In 2019-2020, public school enrollment dropped by 3 percent nationwide, erasing a decade of slow gains. The decline was attributed largely to COVID-related disruptions, and was concentrated in the early grades. Many families simply opted out of remote learning in the non-compulsory grades of pre-K and kindergarten. School leaders hoped this year would bring recovery.

To the contrary.

Our sample is neither comprehensive nor necessarily representative, but it is large enough to suggest some important patterns. This reporting builds on NPR’s reporting from 2020, which documented enrollment drops at a similar sample of districts across the country. That finding was substantiated nine months later by the National Center for Education Statistics, including the fact that enrollment losses in public schools were greatest in pre-K and kindergarten.

Where have the students gone?

Educators and researchers we spoke with gave several possible explanations for the continuing falloff: an increase in home-schooling, a shift to charter schools and private schools, another year of delays in entering pre-K or kindergarten, and families moving to enroll in districts that weren’t captured in our sample.

But educators are most worried about vulnerable students who may have fallen through the cracks in the widespread economic and social disruption caused by the pandemic.

“We think we found most of them, but there are still probably a thousand kids out there, we just don’t know what happened to them,” says Dallas Superintendent Michael Hinojosa. “Other urban superintendents are telling me they have significantly higher numbers of students that they’re really worried about.”

Below are some of the enrollment trends we found this year and what they say about the pandemic’s lingering impact — as well as what school leaders are doing to win back families.

Some of the youngest students still have not enrolled

Between the fall of 2019 and the fall of 2020, federal data found a remarkable, 13 percent drop in pre-K and kindergarten enrollment. Districts hoped to see many of these children arrive this fall.

In Champlain Valley, Vermont’s largest school district, enrollment hasn’t returned to pre-pandemic levels, but the schools are seeing a kindergarten bump this fall. “Some of these students were held out of school during the pandemic so they could start kindergarten this year,” says the district’s superintendent, Rene Sanchez.

“Half the kids we lost were pre-K kids,” says Hinojosa in Dallas. Over the summer, he says, his team mounted “a very intentional drive in the community to get those kids back.”

While some did return, overall enrollment in the Dallas Independent School District remains down more than 10,000 students from fall 2019.

The challenge now, for educators, is understanding where those young children and their older siblings went. Did they simply stay home — or did their families enroll them elsewhere?

A shift to private schools

Private and parochial schools generally enroll about 10 percent of all students in the United States, or about 5.7 million students. While nationwide enrollment in private schools dropped last year along with public schools, this year it has rebounded.

The National Association of Independent Schools comprises private, non-parochial schools. They report a net enrollment growth of 1.7{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} over the two pandemic years.

There’s a particularly big rebound in private preschool enrollment in the NAIS sample. That number dropped dramatically between 2019-20 and 2020-21, but then grew 21{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} this fall for a net growth of 6{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} over two years.

While accurate data are not yet available for parochial schools, media reports suggest their enrollment has rebounded this fall as well.

“We saw a couple thousand students that transferred over to private schools in the city,” says Martinez, who took over as chief executive officer this summer in Chicago. “And that was because the private schools were assuring the families that they would be open in-person, no matter what.”

Similarly, “the New Hampshire diocese gave some significant discounts for folks to come [last school year], and it made it really affordable for some families to have that option,” says John Goldhardt, the superintendent in Manchester, that state’s largest district.

Sarah McVay pulled her children from the Seattle Public Schools this fall. “We stuck it out the pandemic year — bad choice — and my 3rd grader essentially sat bored, learning very little all year,” she says. “The number of tech issues was infuriating … it was constant.”

McVay says a staffing change announced at the end of the last school year for seniority reasons, which would have left her son with a long-term substitute, was the last straw.

Tim Robinson, lead media relations specialist for the Seattle schools, acknowledged the difficulties some parents faced last year amid the disruption. “We recognize – and always did recognize – that remote learning presented many challenges,” he said. “And we are very pleased to be able to be back in the classroom this year.”

The Seattle Public Schools report that the district has lost 6.4{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of its students since the start of the pandemic. Statewide, districts in Washington are down 3.5{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} in the same time period.

“We moved to Concordia Lutheran,” McVay says. “We aren’t Lutheran, or even religious, and it was an act of desperation. But it has been truly amazing, and we are going to stay through 8th now.”

The charter school factor

In the fall of 2020, charter schools, which are publicly funded but run separately from districts, saw a 7 percent jump in enrollment, adding about 240,000 students nationwide.

“It translated to the single highest year, in terms of raw numbers, that we’ve ever seen charter schools grow,” says Debbie Veney at the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools. This figure included a big jump at virtual charter schools — a controversial, largely for-profit sector.

In fall 2021 that story has shifted: K12 Inc and Connections Academy, the nation’s largest virtual charter providers, told NPR their enrollment is relatively flat from last year.

Meanwhile some brick and mortar charters continue to gain students, as NPR’s examination of statewide data in Massachusetts and Georgia showed.

In New York City, the KIPP charter school network opened three new schools this fall, fueling an enrollment jump of 11 percent. In fact, KIPP schools in the city grew during both pandemic years, to a total of 7,150 students.

“We benefited just from having deep relationships with our families for retention,” says Jane Martinez Dowling, KIPP NYC’s external chief officer. “And we sort of doubled down on making sure that we were in touch with our families, that we did have different modes of going out there and doing recruitment even during COVID.” This included multilingual advertising in local publications.

In the Rochester, N.Y., public schools, enrollment has fallen from 25,000 before the pandemic to around 22,000 this year, says Lesli Myers-Small, the superintendent. Almost 7,000 students now attend local charters, which, she says, tells her: “We have to make our schools attractive again.”

Homeschooling is up, too

Public schools face competition not just from charters and private schools, but from families who have chosen to keep their kids home another year.

In Rochester, the district’s homeschooling numbers are still above average, “because we are limiting the remote options this year,” says Myers-Small. “And we recognize and honor the fact that it might be concerning or scary” for some parents to send their children back to school at this point, especially with fresh fears around the Omicron variant.

A rise in remote work, and the experience of managing students’ virtual learning, may have made more families take a serious look at teaching their children at home. Yet homeschooling oversight varies widely from state to state.

Errick Greene, the superintendent of the Jackson, Miss., public schools, worries about “bootleg homeschooling” — families that may be keeping children at home, but not necessarily giving them a thorough education. Mississippi has no testing requirements, no teacher qualifications and no mandated subjects for homeschooled students.

For some parents, continuing concerns about safety are driving them to keep their children home.

Tanesha Grant, the founder of Parents Supporting Parents New York City, represents a group of about 250 families who, she says, were “traumatized” by the pandemic. They are keeping their kids home from public school, but not officially removing them from the district. They call themselves “school strikers,” holding out for a permanent remote option because they don’t see school as safe.

“Black and brown families we know are disproportionately affected and have had someone die or have COVID-19 in their families,” Grant says. “We live in multigenerational homes. We are still in mourning and still traumatized.”

Lingering concerns about COVID rules and enforcement

COVID safety protocols have been polarizing and politicized in this country, and that is keeping a vocal minority of parents away from public schools.

“We have people in our community that are anti-mask. I’m not saying they’re wrong. I’m just saying, they have their right to self-identify that way,” says Jon Dean, the schools superintendent in Grosse Pointe, Mich. “We exist in a county that has a mask mandate. So we know we have families that are not attending right now because masks are mandatory in our school district.”

Dean says parents’ frustrations over masking requirements showed up in surveys of families who have opted out of public school.

Goldhardt, in Manchester, also saw students leave for private schools with looser COVID rules. “They didn’t require masking … and we did.”

High school students are dropping out to work

Students opting out for charters, private schools or homeschooling can hurt public schools because their funding is based on headcount. For the moment, federal relief funds may cover for revenue lost to enrollment drops, but that money is designed to phase out in several years.

Declining district enrollment is also a community-wide matter, because strong public schools are a selling point for businesses and homebuyers.

But the biggest concern for the country at large is students who drop out of school entirely.

In Baltimore, John Davis, the city’s chief of schools, says his district used federal relief dollars to actively find and reconnect with these students over the summer.

“Literally, just do outreach nonstop … We made thousands of contacts. Those folks did a wonderful job, and I think that’s why we, overall, didn’t see a huge decline [this school year],” Davis says.

Superintendents say they are often losing students to paid jobs.

“A lot of my principals were saying, ‘Dr. Small, we’re losing kids. They’re telling us, I have to work,’ ” says Myers-Small in Rochester. “We did talk to some businesses and said, ‘Listen, you know, Cory should not be working [at this time]. School is in session. He is a student.’ “

Myers-Small says Rochester has increased opportunities for working students to make up lost credits online.

“We … knew that we were fighting against survival and poverty,” she explains. “We wanted to make sure that there were learning opportunities in the afternoon and evening, and we track that we had some scholars who were logging on at seven or eight o’clock at night and doing their coursework.”

In Jackson, Miss., Superintendent Greene says that, during remote learning, teachers told him of students “who were on Zoom calls during the day and at work.” He says some of his principals and staff have reached out to local business-owners to plead for students to have shifts that start after a particular required course.

Greene says he’s tried hard not to force these teens to choose between school and work, and the district is designing a new, fully virtual option for working students or anyone who thrives learning from home.

“School does not have to happen in the hours in which it happens right now. You know, late afternoon, early evening, weekends,” Greene says.

In Dallas, educators are trying to help working students by offering night school.

“It has become popular because now these kids have started making some money, and their families depend on them,” says Superintendent Hinojosa. “And they don’t want to give up their jobs. And so we had to find a different way to meet their needs.”

‘We need you back’

Superintendents across the country tell NPR the pandemic pushed many families to think more deeply about each child’s education — what they need and how best to get it.

“I think families have a desire to gain more control of their lives,” says Ed Graff, the superintendent of the Minneapolis public schools, where enrollment has also continued to decline. “The public education landscape has changed significantly, and families are making calculated decisions to pursue other learning options that are best for their children and for themselves.”

That’s one reason Hinojosa, in Dallas, put up billboards. “We got very aggressive with families and said, ‘We need you back,’ ” he says.

His district paid for billboards along the city’s roadways, display ads on buses, even in convenience stores — an approach pioneered by charter schools.

“We have [an image of] a little kid with a stethoscope and a doctor’s jacket — to say, ‘Look, these kids are going to become doctors, but, if they don’t come back to school, they’re going to fall further behind.’ “

Roughly 40,000 children attend Dallas-area charter schools, and Hinojosa says he’s had to get creative, even before the pandemic, reaching families and winning them over. Now, he says, they’re pulling out all the stops, including the creation of new schools with more popular curricular offerings.

“We embrace competition, which makes us better,” Hinojosa says. “And I think we’re beating them.” Though that’s not yet reflected in the district’s enrollment.

At South Dakota hockey game, teachers competed to grab cash : NPR

At South Dakota hockey game, teachers competed to grab cash : NPR
$1 bills
$1 bills

Schoolteachers grabbed at dollar bills in a “dash for cash” during intermission at a hockey game in South Dakota, sparking controversy for turning teachers’ need to pay for classroom supplies into a public spectacle.

“As a teacher, I find this humiliating,” a commenter wrote after video of the event was posted to Twitter. “Scrambling against others on the ground for a few $1 bills? How about honoring teachers with genuine donations rather than turning us into silly entertainment for fans?”

The Sioux Falls Stampede hockey team had urged fans not to miss Saturday’s contest, which it promoted as its inaugural “Dash for Cash.” With fans cheering them on, 10 teachers from local schools gathered around a large piece of carpet at center ice, where $5,000 in $1 bills had just been dumped out.

The event highlighted South Dakota’s low teacher pay

The educators wore hockey helmets, but they made little contact with each other as they dropped to their knees to scoop up money and stuff it into their shirts and pockets.

Video of the event went viral over the weekend after reporter Annie Todd of the Sioux Falls Argus Leader posted it on Twitter.

The hockey team did not immediately respond to a request for comment from NPR.

South Dakota ranks toward the bottom in terms of spending on education. The average salary for teachers in the state is $48,984 — 50th in the U.S. (in a list that includes Washington, D.C.) — according to the National Education Association union, which says the state spends $10,805 per student — 38th in the nation.

One critic of the dash for cash promotion called it “dystopian,” noting that while schools and teachers struggle, the U.S. House of Representatives just approved a new U.S. military bill worth $768 billion. The defense authorization bill includes money for two more destroyers than the Biden administration requested.

The teachers went for the money, not at each other

The Stampede, a junior league team whose players are 16-20 years old, said all the money the teachers could grab would be used for their own classrooms or school programs.

As for the teachers who took part in the promotion, it might not come as a surprise that they gamely tolerated the hoopla, while focusing on what they can do for their students. When the dash ended, they smiled and waved to the crowd, their shirts bulging with cash.

“I think it’s really cool when the community offers an opportunity like this” to pay for things that usually come out of a teacher’s own pocket, said Alexandria Kuyper, who teaches fifth-graders, in an interview with the Argus Leader.

Kuyper came away with $592, one of the highest totals, according to the newspaper. The smallest hauls were just under $380. Money for the contest was donated by home lender CU Mortgage Direct.

The sponsor said it saw the dash as a way to help educators, noting the additional stresses brought on by the pandemic.

“The teachers in this area, and any teacher, they deserve whatever the heck they get,” Ryan Knudson, CU Mortgage Direct’s director of business development and marketing, told the Argus Leader.

The Stampede also put $5,000 up for grabs at Sunday’s home game, pitting two fans against one another in a shootout on the ice.

South Dakota is looking to boost teacher pay

Last week, Gov. Kristi Noem proposed a 6{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} increase in state aid for public education, a move that the state’s teachers union welcomed.

The money should go directly to teachers and staff, Noem said, citing the challenges they face and the need to compete in a tight hiring market. But the South Dakota Education Association also notes that if state lawmakers approve the increase in their upcoming session, it will still be up to school districts to choose where and how to use the additional funds.

South Dakota’s public school system receives nearly 14{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of its revenue from the federal government — one of the highest percentages in the country, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.