Students return to D.C.-area schools, but not in pre-pandemic numbers

Students return to D.C.-area schools, but not in pre-pandemic numbers

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Virtual school wasn’t working for Amani Walker.

The now-7-year-old was a prekindergartner at a D.C. charter school when the pandemic began. All of her learning was happening through a computer screen, and her mother, Crystal Gray, noticed she was struggling.

So, with the help of a scholarship, Gray transferred her daughter to a private school. But Amani fell behind. “She was lacking in reading, she was lacking in math,” said Gray, 40, a federal government worker and board member for local parent advocacy group PAVE (Parents Amplifying Voices in Education). And when Gray asked for additional resources, the new school wouldn’t deliver, she said.

Then Gray decided to give traditional public schools a try. She enrolled Amani at Watkins Elementary.

“I just noticed that they really catered to her,” Gray said, noting that Watkins provides Amani with small-group instruction, twice-weekly tutoring and other support. “It makes me optimistic, because I think DCPS had such a bad rap at one time, especially when I was growing up in D.C.”

Amani is one of hundreds of children who came to the city’s traditional public school system this year, fueling an enrollment burst that has helped it overcome a pandemic-era enrollment slump. Citywide, enrollment in the traditional public and charter sectors hit a milestone 96,572 students this year, according to preliminary, unaudited data. It’s the highest enrollment recorded in 15 years, Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) declared in November.

Across the Washington region, other school systems have also made gains since the first two years of the public health crisis, when enrollment plummeted. But most have not yet made a full recovery.

Data from Montgomery County and Prince George’s County public schools — Maryland’s two largest districts — shows that enrollment is up but hasn’t reached pre-pandemic levels. And although school enrollment is on the rise in Northern Virginia, no system has rebounded fully, and officials warn that districts are unlikely to do so, leading to reductions in funding and staffing this year and in coming years.

Before the pandemic, 51,037 students were enrolled in D.C.’s traditional public schools, according to city data. Numbers fell to 49,890 during the first year of the pandemic, then again to 49,035 during the 2021-2022 school year.

But this year, enrollment surpassed 50,000 students, preliminary data shows.

“These numbers are preliminary, but they are heartening,” Christina Grant, D.C.’s state superintendent of education, said when the numbers were revealed last month. “They really do reinforce what we know: The place for our children — the best place for our children — [is] in schools.”

Experts have pointed to falling birthrates, as well as parents who left the District or pulled their children out of schools during the pandemic, to explain slipping enrollment. As the public health crisis persisted, D.C. public schools saw the largest drops in the prekindergarten years — enrollment slumped by nearly 6 percent.

But those numbers have rebounded. Officials said pre-K3 and pre-K4 enrollment jumped by more than 6 percent and 5 percent, respectively, over the previous year. School system leaders also said they saw growth in ninth- and 10th-grade enrollment — although experts say it is typical to see enrollment spike around ninth grade, a common transition point for families who want to switch feeder patterns.

Enrollment in D.C.’s charter sector — composed of 69 operators that educate almost half of the city’s public school students — has held steady. That sector has grown almost every year since the Office of the State Superintendent of Education started its citywide student count in 2007. Unlike in other school systems, the number of students in D.C. charter schools has grown since the pandemic — from 43,518 during the 2019-2020 school year to 46,449 this year, an almost 7 percent jump.

Much of that growth has happened because the sector regularly opens new schools and adds new programs, said Tomeika Bowden, a spokeswoman for the D.C. Public Charter School Board. The board also saw 26 charter campuses or programs shutter between 2012 and 2020, according to its website.

“We have a whole entire process around schools engaging communities and engaging parents, families about the kinds of programs they would like to see in the city,” Bowden said. The Riverseed School — a D.C. Wildflower Public Charter School site — for example, opened this year and is run by two teachers who created a Montessori program unique to its community in Ward 7, she said.

Elsewhere, Montgomery County Public Schools reported that 160,554 students enrolled this school year, compared with 158,231 students last year. That number, however, is roughly 4,700 below that recorded in the 2019-20 school year, when 165,267 students were enrolled.

Jessica Baxter, a spokeswoman for the school system, said that when campuses reopened for in-person learning, officials reached out to the 6,000 or so students who left while schools were online during the early part of the pandemic. Many of their families said they had moved out of the county or transitioned to private or home schooling, Baxter said. Roughly 1,000 of the students who left came back.

Prince George’s County Public Schools have seen a similar trend. This school year, the system reported an enrollment of 130,798 students, an increase of about 2,000 over last year’s reported enrollment of 128,777. But that is roughly 5,200 students fewer than in the 2019-20 school year, with a reported enrollment of 135,962 students.

Statewide enrollment figures will be released in January, according to a spokesperson from the Maryland State Department of Education.

Most schools in Prince George’s County, and across the Washington region, restarted in-person instruction during the 2021-22 school year. By that point, enrollment had dropped in most places — mirroring national trends.

Schools across the country experienced an unprecedented decline in public school enrollment, most starkly in early grades such as kindergarten and first grade, during the fall 2020-21 school year, said Thomas Dee, a Stanford University economist and researcher. Schools that chose to offer only remote instruction saw the largest declines, he said.

National data shows that many children still have not returned, Dee said, and “there’s a bit of mystery” about where they’ve gone.

A report from the American Enterprise Institute — a right-leaning think tank — similarly found that schools that offered the most amount of remote options saw bigger declines in enrollment. School districts surrounding D.C. tended to teach remotely longer than districts elsewhere, likely contributing to declines from the beginning of the pandemic, said Nat Malkus, a senior fellow and the deputy director of education policy at the institute. Public school students are gradually returning, he said, but “more shallowly than a lot of school districts would hope for.”

Data from the Census Bureau shows that many Americans moved during the pandemic, suggesting that the reduced enrollment probably wasn’t just a flight from public schools, Dee said. In Maryland, public school enrollment fell by about 2.7 percent during the pandemic, he said, but at the same time, the state’s school-aged population decreased by 0.6 percent.

Demographic shifts are also affecting public school enrollment in Virginia. Loudoun County Public Schools has 82,082 students this year, according to the state Education Department — an increase over the past two school years, but a roughly 2 percent drop compared with the 2019-2020 school year, when Loudoun enrolled 83,933 students. Most of the loss appears to be happening in kindergarten and ninth grade, said Wayde Byard, a schools spokesman.

“While we did note an increase in the number of families who moved [away] or elected to enroll their children in private school or home school in 2020, our overall school population is also aging,” Byard said. He added that, overall, Loudoun is graduating more students each year than it is adding new kindergartners. “This speaks to Loudoun’s slowing birthrate and the overall aging of Loudoun’s population, particularly females in the childbearing age group,” he said.

The school system has eliminated 400 full-time staffing positions because of reduced enrollment and is anticipating a roughly $8.2 million drop in state funding for fiscal 2023 compared with what it would have been under pre-pandemic enrollment levels, Byard said. State funding for Virginia public schools is tied to student-body size.

Nearby, Fairfax County Public Schools, the state’s largest school system, boasts a student population of 180,127 this year, per Virginia Education Department data. Although it represents an increase from the previous two school years, it falls far short of the last pre-pandemic enrollment numbers: 188,930 students in the 2019-2020 school year. The drop of nearly 9,000 students represents a loss of roughly 4.7 percent of Fairfax’s pre-pandemic student body.

Between the end of the last school year and October, Fairfax lost about 1,000 middle-schoolers, close to 400 preschoolers and slightly fewer than 100 elementary-schoolers, according to an online data set documenting student enrollment data. The system added nearly 900 new high school students.

Another database showed that, between the end of the last school year and the start of this one, the system overall lost roughly 12,300 students but gained roughly 15,900, meaning Fairfax schools saw a net increase of around 3,600 students. Of those who departed, nearly 42 percent opted for a public school elsewhere in Virginia or the United States. Roughly 8 percent chose a school “outside the United States,” while 7 percent switched to a private or parochial school and 2 percent opted for home schooling. Other, much smaller numbers of students left for reasons including “financial hardship,” “employment,” “family” and “achievement problems.”

Asked how the shift in enrollment will affect funding and staffing levels, Fairfax schools spokeswoman Julie Moult pointed to a document detailing the district’s approved budget for fiscal 2023. A page of that document notes that Fairfax decreased its number of full-time positions by 424.3 for 2023, adjusting to a corresponding reduction of 917.7 positions for student enrollment. It also says Fairfax’s “net savings” from updated enrollment projections will be $88.2 million.

“Enrollment projections reflect the anticipated ‘new normal’ as a result of significant declines in public education resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic,” the document states. “Staff continues to monitor enrollment trends and will recommend budgetary adjustments as necessary.”

In Arlington Public Schools, the student population this year totals 27,582, per state data: an increase from the prior two school years but below the enrollment of 28,151 recorded for the last pre-pandemic school year. Arlington schools spokesman Frank Bellavia said the district has not seen a decrease in funding or staff.

“Rather, we have increased resources for schools to help support students and provide extra assistance for both academics and mental health,” he said. “We have reduced classes, provided additional math and reading support at elementary and secondary schools [and] increased staffing for special education students.”

Enrollment shrank in Grades 3, 6, 7, 9 and 11, but rose for Grades 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 10 and 12, Bellavia said. He speculated that some families may have relocated because their jobs allow them to work remotely. The school system is also aware that other families chose private schools or home schooling.

Alexandria City Public Schools saw similar enrollment trends. The student body this year totals 16,089, an increase from the previous two school years but a 1.3 percent decline from pre-pandemic enrollment. Alexandria’s executive director of facilities, Erika Gulick, said in a statement that the district is seeing slight decreases in middle-school enrollment. And after years of failing to meet projections, kindergarten enrollment is rising again.

Gulick attributed Alexandria’s loss of students to broader regional trends, including slowing population growth across Northern Virginia. She said that the district’s 10-year projections are still being finalized but that “at this time … [it] does not anticipate growth back to pre-pandemic levels.”

Homeschooling numbers sky-rocket during the pandemic in Canada

Homeschooling numbers sky-rocket during the pandemic in Canada

In Canada, homeschooling doubled in the initial yr of the pandemic. Far more than 83,000 students enrolled in homeschooling in the 2020/2021 college 12 months, &#13
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On the decrease amount of a townhouse in Port Moody, a few youngsters are busy building dough as aspect of a science experiment in their kitchen that has turned into a classroom.

A few laptops are tucked into the bookcase as the Widjaya triplets arrive downstairs to start out their Monday early morning course. 

Each working day is plainly outlined on a whiteboard higher than the desk, so the a few 13-12 months-olds know specifically what is on the agenda for the working day.

Monday is packed with diverse workouts and schoolwork on Tuesday morning, they participate in a co-op Wednesday is schoolwork Thursday, they go to in-person class and each individual 2nd Friday, they have a group conference. 

“It’s exceptionally active but extremely fulfilling at the exact same time,” says Joc Widjaya, their mother and total-time homeschool trainer.

The loved ones commenced homeschooling in March 2020 when the triplets had been pressured to learn at residence because of to COVID-19 closing classrooms.

“When they arrived home, we observed there were substantial understanding gaps,” claims Widjaya. “No fault on the teachers we are so grateful for what they did. And they experienced astounding teachers, but they ended up stretched, and it was just a challenge for them to be capable to get what the young children wanted.”

Homeschooling quickly became permanent by preference.

“It is been a large results,” she claims. “We’ve done Quality 6 and Quality 7 completely homeschooling.” 

In Canada, 83,784 college students enrolled in homeschooling in the 2020/2021 school calendar year, compared to 40,608 enrolled the prior school 12 months. There were over 5.6 million learners enrolled in Canadian elementary and secondary schooling plans in 2020/2021, symbolizing a minimize of 0.7 for each cent from the former university yr. 

There is no scarcity of choices for people among public colleges, private schools, homeschooling and different universities. 

“It’s an amazing option that we have in British Columbia to have a choice. I assume which is a actual privilege,” suggests Karolyn Hendra, an Early Childhood Educator assistant professor at Thompson Rivers University. 

But although it may well get the job done for some families, Hendra warns it should be the right in shape for the two the small children and the parent-educator. 

“Just about every single kid is exceptional and has exceptional requirements every single household is unique. Each individual group is one of a kind,” she claims. “Some of us just can’t do it. And that’s flawlessly fine. We’re not all gifted in the same techniques. From time to time the mother or father-youngster marriage does not lend alone to a parent staying also an tutorial instructor.” 

Hendra sees family as a child’s foundation and mother and father as the first teachers, introducing homeschooling is a huge conclusion and one particular that can operate with the suitable assist.

“It is an all-encompassing final decision to make,” says Hendra, who notes it is crucial to have a robust plan, including socialization, to steer clear of isolation. 

“I’ve found some family members that are definitely connected. So they fulfill a bunch of other homeschooling households, and they get alongside one another as a neighborhood. And that’s where that form of social lifetime occurs,” she states. 

Hendra, who has been researching and doing the job in education for 30 yrs, believes homeschooling is a chance to reimagine what education can appear like.

“We don’t make college methods that small children have to in good shape into,” she claims. “We establish college devices that are for young children. And so … who is the method serving? And if it truly is not serving them any more, perfectly, then the process has to adjust, not the youngster, ideal?”

Homeschooling might be very profitable for 1 youngster. Still, other people may well thrive in the general public faculty procedure, which is why Hendra believes the total way training is shipped and managed needs to be reimagined. 

Changing to homeschooling

On this distinct Monday, the triplets will be doing work on a Bible task video, English, typing and piano. They will make cookie dough, function on fiscal literacy, and finish the day with a piano lesson and visit the library. 

For Widjaya, the most fulfilling element of homeschooling is also the most difficult. 

“Time together is a must have. You miss out on out so a lot when they’re not in this article. And time academically, as well, due to the fact they get instruction from 1 human being,” she states.

At home, she can acquire the time to make confident the young children are understanding at their rate with out relocating on way too swiftly. But private ‘time’ is also complicated. 

“You only have a limited quantity of time,” says Widjaya. “You’re still a spouse. You happen to be even now a housewife. You are nonetheless … [you] have your personal pursuits.”

For her, educating at house is all truly worth it. 

“It is fast paced there’s tons of preparing,” states Widjaya. “As any homeschool guardian can say, you might be instructing your possess little one, which has its possess dynamics because they would respond otherwise to an outsider trainer than their moms and dads.”

Widjaya’s triplets stick to a curriculum but can be adaptable and creative with how issues are taught. Getting them together will allow them to construct off and assistance each individual other.

“If one has a energy, then they can share that with yet another human being who may well be struggling,” she states. 

As for the children’s upcoming, Noah wishes to be a pianist, and Chelsie and Eli are nonetheless determining. 

The reaction is unanimous when asking the triplets how they delight in learning at household. 

“It is amazing,” claims Eli. “It truly is really versatile, and we constantly close up obtaining our school operate performed.”

Choices for homeschooling in B.C.

Mom and dad and guardians have two solutions for homeschooling in British Columbia: registering or enrolling. 

The Widjaya loved ones is enrolled, so they are accountable to the governing administration to abide by a grade-specific curriculum and have studying requirements they have to have to meet up with. At the beginning of every calendar year, the relatives is provided $600 for every boy or girl in funding for the local community course. 

“We are related to impartial houses, and our little ones go a single day a week to in-classroom faculty. It truly is named group class,” claims Widjaya.

Due to their enrollment, they are assigned a mastering assist teacher who appears to be through their curriculum alternatives for the whole yr and gives strategies and concepts for the family members. 

On the other side of the spectrum, mother and father of registered homeschooled little ones are dependable for the finish instruction of their young children. They have the duty to give and supervise the instructional system, in accordance to the province’s web site. 

The province also states that there will be evaluation and assessment to ascertain the child’s instruction progress no cost of demand and a mortgage of instructional source components that are approved and advised by the ministry. The school that the youngster is registered with has no authority to approve or supervise the educational plan of a homeschooled child that is registered. 

For much more data on sources obtainable to men and women seeking to homeschool, you can pay a visit to the Province’s web page.

As home-school numbers soar in SoMD, CSM provides programming to help families

As home-school numbers soar in SoMD, CSM provides programming to help families

Dwelling-school family members searching for assistance in building an educational system that works best for their children can transform to the University of Southern Maryland (CSM) for activities that aid learners of every age with their academics.

In the previous 5 years, Southern Maryland has noticed a 74 percent boost in home-faculty students and now has much more than 9,000 learners understanding at property, according to the Maryland Point out Department’s yearly household-faculty facts. CSM is responding to that have to have by creating its current programming, launching a 2nd house-faculty plan at the Leonardtown Campus this drop, and web hosting a “Homeschool Experience Day” for household-faculty students interested in twin enrollment Friday, April 29 from 9 a.m. – 1 p.m. at its Prince Frederick Campus.

“This Homeschool Working experience Working day celebration is a way for household-school pupils to get a sense of what it is like to be on a university campus,” said CSM Enrollment Coordinator Mary Prather. “They can try out a class, interact with faculty and workers, and understand about the companies available.”

For property-schooled significant schoolers, twin enrollment gives a way to satisfy superior school program demands although simultaneously working toward an associate degree. At the April 29 occasion, college students will have the chance to chat to latest dwelling-schooled twin enrollment college students, study about the college’s transfer and articulation agreements that offer you confirmed admission to dozens of faculties and universities nationwide, knowledge a CSM course taught by CSM professors, take a look at aid services that are readily available, and uncover out about university student govt and other CSM golf equipment and corporations. Pupils can also just take a vocation assessment, love refreshments and gain prizes.

Household-school pupils who dual enroll at CSM have entry to the exact same benefits as conventional college students, like comprehensive access to all college or university expert services like clubs, free of charge tutoring, discovering assistance workshops, library methods, and workout rooms. House-school students also obtain a 50{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} discount on tuition if they satisfy sure prerequisites. 

Enrollment Coordinator Latasha Baker reported that house-school college students have a proven record of accomplishment at CSM.

“These learners are utilised to obtaining some independence with their instruction, and that tends to make them properly-geared up for the changeover to higher education-level lessons. Household-school students are some of the most successful learners on campus,” she reported.

In 2019, twin-enrolled property-college scholar Phillip Usually means was the showcased pupil speaker at Spring Commencement.  At 17, he acquired an associate degree in applied science and technological innovation.  And with several of his faculty courses also counting towards his substantial university credits, he acquired his superior university diploma the exact same calendar year.

“I hope we can all join the lessons uncovered at CSM to our futures. I uncovered to just take edge of opportunities… I realized to established aims,” he explained in his speech. “We have made into a lot more resourceful, extra motivated, and ideally lifelong learners thanks to the Faculty of Southern Maryland.”  Indicates, now 21, took individuals classes to coronary heart and will be graduating from the College of Alabama with his bachelor’s in Mechanical Engineering this Could.

CSM also delivers guidance for homeschooling family members with young little ones as a result of the Kids’ and Teenager College or university. Households can indication up for courses this sort of as chemistry, painting, or Spanish, all of which are at present available at the La Plata Campus. 

“People choose to residence-faculty for several distinct reasons, and we try to produce an ambiance that fits this specialized niche local community,” explained Tony Warrick, CSM youth software supervisor for the Kids’ and Teen School. “That usually means getting adaptable, supplying issue issue gurus, and having a assorted system that meets the requirements of all our students,”

Maggie Mudd-Stewart, who residence-educational institutions her two children and helped to establish the program at CSM’s La Plata Campus, said she is enthusiastic for the skill to indication her young children up for courses that require assets that she does not have access to at household, and she appreciates figuring out that they are currently being taught by authorities who are attuned to the county’s necessities for homeschool education and learning.

“This presents me the skill to have and make a hybrid discovering environment,” she mentioned.

Students intrigued in the Homeschool Encounter Working day can register at https://www.csmd.edu/calendar/2022/04/homeschool-working experience-working day.html.


Pandemic sees California homeschool application numbers soar

Pandemic sees California homeschool application numbers soar

Legislation, coronavirus likely behind recent uptick in homeschooling numbers

Legislation, coronavirus likely behind recent uptick in homeschooling numbers

Speedy Town, S.D. — South Dakota’s homeschooling community has been growing at an unprecedented charge in the last few decades, rising 25{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} from 2019 to 2020 and 22{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} from 2020 to 2021.

People quantities equating to about 5{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of South Dakota’s faculty-age populace, next carefully driving the nationwide normal of 6-7{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}.

Us Homeschooling Chart

Growth of homeschooling in the United States, courtesy of the National Home Schooling Investigation Institute

Incredibly, that increase does not correlate to a lower in public faculty enrollment in simple fact, enrollment amplified approximately 1{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} from 2020 to 2021 in South Dakota’s public faculties.

Point out legislative watchdog team Households for Option Instruction Legal rights in South Dakota (FAIRSD) claims it is tricky to know for positive what the reasoning is driving each individual selection to homeschool, but they attribute the progress to three factors – coronavirus getting just one.

“A good deal of people families…they possibly dropped into homeschooling and they may not remain with it,” claims Jennifer Beving, a member of FAIRSD’s committee and a homeschool mom. “I could see a ton of them heading back again into public college once that has settled down.”

In addition to homeschooling for COVID-relevant factors, Beving states mother and father whose kids had to learn at residence through the pandemic could have felt empowered, which includes those people that moved to South Dakota due to the fact of the state’s pandemic reaction.

“A good deal of folks who are inclined to pack up their loved ones and move thanks to COVID limitations are most likely possible the type of families that would homeschool or perhaps were being by now homeschooling,” Beving suggests.

Homeschool Enrollment Fall Count Courtesy Sd Doe

Knowledge courtesy of the South Dakota Department of Education

Apart from the pandemic, the latest legislation not only introduced homeschooling into people’s minds, but Beving states it also streamlined the notification system to the Condition.

“I believe that likely reached individuals that did not know essentially how to notify right before, and so I believe that likely boosted our figures,” Beving adds.

That legislation, 2021 Senate Monthly bill 177, also gave homeschool pupils the possibility to take part in general public school athletics and functions.

Beving thinks the impressive raises viewed in excess of the earlier couple yrs will not very last but will as an alternative stage-off.

Regardless, she suggests that the quantities demonstrate FAIRSD’s mission to make homeschooling a viable academic choice is a results.

Click on Listed here for a breakdown of enrollment in educational institutions across South Dakota compiled by the condition Division of Instruction.

Kansas homeschooling numbers spike after pandemic-era remote learning

Kansas homeschooling numbers spike after pandemic-era remote learning
Kansas homeschooling numbers spike after pandemic-era remote learning

WICHITA — Worried about safety, resistant to mask orders and troubled by a lack of confidence in public schools, thousands more Kansas parents are opting to teach their kids at home.

The shift comes in the wake of the pandemic that convinced those families they could handle the job.

“We just had call after call after call,” said Bert Moore, who oversees home-school registrations for the Kansas Department of Education. “And they continue to call us. This isn’t something that occurs in just August. … It will be May before we have the final number.”

During a normal school year, about 1,400 Kansas families newly register to home school. Last year that number more than tripled — to 5,527 — and the trend doesn’t seem to be slowing. So far this year, more than 2,250 new families have registered.