AUSTIN, Texas -- The rural-versus-urban broadband divide became a more urgent problem for Texas and many other parts of the U.S. when COVID-19 forced schools to close.
The Texas community of Bastrop is just a 30-minute drive from Austin, but its rural character meant when the pandemic hit, the lack of internet connectivity kept the communities worlds apart.
Kathy D'Amico, a teacher who coordinates the Response to Intervention efforts in the Bastrop Independent School District, said adopting remote learning was no easy feat.
"I'm in the system," D'Amico explained. "I know the system backwards and forwards. I know what to do, I know what they need to do, and it was still a huge challenge."
D'Amico believes the lack of consistent technology in many rural parts of Texas caused frustration for students and parents, and could have resulted in teachers grading on privilege rather than ability, because not all children have had access to the same tools or technology.
Lindy Schweitzer, a second-grade teacher in Bastrop, found many families often had only one internet device to be shared among several children.
Others couldn't participate in remote learning, according to Schweitzer, because the system was down or there were too many people on the same Wi-Fi hotspot.
"So, we started off sending out school buses with hotspots on them and that wasn't enough; so then, we had to start ordering personal home hotspots and there weren't always enough for everybody to get a hotspot that needed a hotspot," Schweitzer recounted.
Emily Dominguez, a pre-kindergarten teacher in the Bastrop, said remote learning isn't ideal, but children were still able to ask questions, learn how to speak in full sentences and hold a pencil.
However, she also experienced audio drops and knew the lessons weren't reaching all the students.
"Oftentimes I couldn't hear children, or it was so scratchy that I just had to guess and try to read their lips when I was doing a Zoom," Dominguez noted. "Testing was a big challenge as well."
Gov. Greg Abbott recently declared rural connectivity a priority issue for Texas, and teachers say those investments are critical to students and the communities where they live.
Disclosure: American Federation of Teachers contributes to our fund for reporting on Education, Health Issues, Livable Wages/Working Families, and Social Justice. If you would like to help support news in the public interest,
click here.
get more stories like this via email
Schools across North Carolina report grappling with severe staff shortages. Districts began the year down more than 4,000 teachers, according to data from the North Carolina School Superintendents Association. The average starting teacher pay in North Carolina is around $37,000. Stagnating wages, plus pandemic burnout, are making it more difficult to recruit and retain educators.
Tara Whitbread, associate director of admissions At William Peace University, said the state's licensing and certification process can be another barrier, especially for people looking to begin careers in special education.
"A lot of districts are being creative to fill their shortages," Whitbread said. "So, they're taking teacher assistants, instructional assistants, who already have their bachelor's degree and they are putting them in a full time, lead teacher position."
According to a report by the nonprofit Best NC, traditional public school enrollment statewide has been on the decline since 2005, while the number of kids who are home-schooled or attending charter schools has increased substantially.
Whitbread explained someone with a bachelor's degree who wants a teaching license must enroll in an educator preparation program, which can take up to three years to complete, and said many non-licensed individuals are already working as instructional assistants or teacher assistants, which is a major issue.
"Teachers are working full-time as basically beginning teachers," Whitbread said. "And they either don't have the support in their school system, or they're working to manage being a teacher and take college level classes. (:13) So, they're not fulfilling their licensure requirements within those three years."
Whitbread said anyone interested in a teaching career should explore options for getting firsthand classroom experience, and to do the research on colleges offering educator preparation programs.
"If you've never been a teacher in a classroom before, see if you can be an instructional support teacher; be an IA, an instructional assistant or a teacher assistant," she said.
A recent state Supreme Court-ordered plan said North Carolina plans to spend an estimated $5-billion by 2028 on new teacher support programs, fellowships and residency programs to populate classrooms with qualified educators.
Disclosure: William Peace University contributes to our fund for reporting on Education. If you would like to help support news in the public interest,
click here.
get more stories like this via email
A Nevada nonprofit is celebrating a 94% graduation rate among its high school seniors for the 2021-2022 school year.
Tami Hance-Lehr. CEO and state director of Communities In Schools of Nevada, said the graduation rate is based on its 453 case-managed high school seniors, most of whom are students who qualify for free and reduced-price lunch, or are experiencing some other form of poverty.
Hance-Lehr pointed out Nevada's graduation rate for such students is around 82%. Compared with the state's overall graduation rate, African American students in the program are 17.1 percentage points above the statewide average, Hispanic and Latino students are 14 percentage points greater and multiracial students are ahead by 13 percentage points.
She noted the pandemic presented many challenges for students to cross the finish line.
"The other thing to keep in mind is when these students came to us, the majority of those seniors when they started working with Communities In Schools either in their junior or senior year were not on track to graduate," Hance-Lehr recounted. "They were most likely credit deficient."
Hance-Lehr explained it is not only identifying barriers keeping kids from attending school and working to get students back on-track, but also making sure they have goals after high school. The program puts a full-time on-site coordinator on every one of its 92 partnering campuses, to help in the effort.
Hance-Lehr stressed of the 453 high school seniors, half plan to attend college, 32% plan to join the workforce, 14% plan to get a certification, apprenticeship or attend a trade school and 4% plan to join the military.
While the program's focus is on K-12 students, Hance-Lehr noted they are prioritizing support to their alumni once they leave the program.
"We need to be focusing on our students after they graduate as well," Hance-Lehr contended. "Barriers that we remove for them and get them to graduation, do not just go away when we've given them a diploma, and then they enter into the world and say 'here you go.' There are still transportation barriers, there are still trauma barriers, there are still poverty barriers."
Hance-Lehr emphasized they have more than a hundred community partners and acknowledged the work they do would not be possible without them. She added community providers are able to help students with more individualized needs.
get more stories like this via email
Missourians can now see how often their schools use seclusion and restraint to address student behavior.
A 2021 law requires that schools report these incidents to the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, beginning this school year.
State Rep. Ian Mackey, D-St. Louis, said he proposed the original bill after many parents shared their children's school discipline experiences, many of whom qualified for special education services.
He said it allows the use of seclusion or restraint under very limited conditions.
"It cannot be used as a form of punishment," said Mackey. "It cannot be used punitively to teach a child a lesson. It must only be used if a child poses a threat, and as soon as the threat is mitigated, the seclusion and restraint must cease. That is what the law says."
The law also requires that schools notify parents when these interventions are used with their child.
Just over 600 Missouri students were secluded and 1,565 were restrained in the first half of the current school year.
Mackey said he hopes this law promotes the use of more positive approaches to behavior change in Missouri schools.
Amy Gott reported that her son was frequently secluded or restrained from first through fifth grade and that - in the beginning - the school rarely notified her.
In addition to being isolated from peers, Gott said he missed out on what was being taught when he was sent to what was known as the "recovery room."
"He would tell me, 'Well, she would sit me down in front of the same worksheet that they had in the classroom that I didn't understand, and tell me to work on it,'" Gott quoted her son had said. "And he said, 'I just didn't understand it.'"
Gott's son was eventually diagnosed with Asperger's, a high-functioning form of autism.
She began homeschooling him in fifth grade. She said she believes it was the school's misinterpretation of his behavior that led to years of being secluded from the classroom.
"A lot of times, at first especially, it would be like the rest of the day," said Gott. "And I mean from 10 o'clock on. Instead of him having autism and not understanding, he was being defiant."
get more stories like this via email