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September 17, 2022

Democrats are in a panic after the September 1, 2022 report of student test scores which show school closures during the pandemic wiped out 50 years of academic progress in America.

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In 2022, the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) administered the National Assessment of Educational Progress, usually referred to as the “nation’s report card,” in math and reading for nine-year-old students to determine the academic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Across long-term trend reading and mathematics, there were no increases in scores for any of the selected student groups compared to 2020, only declines or stagnant scores for nine-year-olds.

In math, there was a first time ever drop for nine-year-olds since the test began in 1973.  Their reading scores dropped the most since 1990.  Between 2020 and 2022, average reading scores for nine-year-old students dropped five points and math scores dropped seven points.

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The learning loss was most severe among low-performing and minority students, which widened between 2020-2022 when schools were closed and students learning online from home. Black students lost 13 points in math and white students lost five point — a difference of 8 points.  This widened the black score gap from 25 points in 2020 to 33 points in 2022.

Reading scores remained steady in city schools while those for suburban schools declined eight points, narrowing the gap between the two. Scores for students in the West region did not change significantly.

Although $130 billion from the American Rescue Plan pushed by the Biden administration was allocated for the reopening of schools and social and emotional learning (including Critical Race Theory training for teachers), data from national and state tests show that elementary students are showing recovery in reading and math but middle school students are showing little to no recovery.

Recovery efforts have been impeded by increasing student mental health problems, student absenteeism, and staffing shortages as well as classroom disruptions and behavorioral problems.

Except for hiring more staff, the other issues are being ignored by the Biden administration.  In a statement addressing the NAEP results, U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said,

Our top priority remains to make sure states, schools, and districts are using these funds on strategies we know work like well-resourced schools, high-dosage tutoring and enriching afterschool programs — and directing the most resources towards students who fell furthest behind. We must repair the damage done by Donald Trump’s mismanagement of the pandemic — and we will.