Coronavirus school shutdowns threaten to deepen U.S.
'digital divide'
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[April 23, 2020] By
Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - Liz Peasley, a special
education aide in the rural Grand Coulee Dam School District in
Washington State, drives 10 miles from her home on the Colville Indian
Reservation just to get a workable cellphone signal.
Now, with schools shut down until the fall because of the coronavirus
pandemic, Peasley – who doesn't own a computer or tablet – is
confronting the same dilemma millions of others in the United States are
facing: How to ensure kids trapped at home receive some version of an
education if they can't get online.
"I'm super overwhelmed," said Peasley, who has three kids between the
ages of 10 and 13. "I'm a single mom – it's tough for us on a good day."
Some 14% of school-age children, or 7 million, live in a home without
high-speed internet, many in less populated areas that lack service or
in low-income households that cannot afford it, a 2018 Department of
Commerce study found.
In many cases, households may rely only on a cellphone, or may share a
single device among several children, making it challenging to complete
schoolwork even in the best of times.
While the digital divide is not a new phenomenon, the coronavirus
outbreak has laid bare the technological inequities that bedevil rural
and impoverished school districts, including Grand Coulee, where
two-thirds of the approximately 720 students - many Native American -
are eligible for free or reduced-price lunch.
Now educators worry those disparities will turn achievement gaps into an
"achievement chasm," in the words of Michele Orner, the superintendent
of the rural Octorara Area School District in Pennsylvania.
Some districts have reverted to earlier technologies, with staffers
delivering paper packets along with meals for needy families. Some
schools have stationed buses transmitting mobile wireless signals in
neighborhoods; others have encouraged students to park near the school
on the weekend and use the wireless network to download necessary
materials.
But officials warn some kids will be left behind no matter what. Those
concerns have only deepened as the coronavirus-forced hiatus has grown
from weeks to months.
Thirty-seven states have either mandated or recommended that public
schools serving more than 40 million students remain closed for the rest
of the academic year, according to a running tally by the news
publication Education Week.
Some states have already warned their schools may not reopen after
summer. Washington State Governor Jay Inslee, for instance, encouraged
school officials to start preparing in case the shutdown stretches into
the fall.
'SUMMER SLIDE ON STEROIDS'
The U.S. government provides some $4 billion each year to schools and
libraries to increase broadband access, but the program does not permit
them to use funding to extend offsite access.
"Those students that can't do online learning are falling further
behind," said John Windhausen, the executive director of the Schools,
Health & Libraries Broadband Coalition. "It's going to cause a real
problem, because the skills that students learn (in class) build off of
each other."
The risks are particularly acute for students with special education
needs, including those who have individualized instruction plans that
may not be suited for distance learning.
[to top of second column] |
Staff members Dan McKeown, campus security officer, Rob Czetli,
director of technology and Robert Steffy, technology support staff
wear masks outside the Octorara Area School District in
Pennsylvania, U.S., March 31, 2020, as they prepare to hand out
laptops and tablets to parents to facilitate schoolwork at home
after the district closed down due to the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak. Michele Orner/Handout via REUTERS
Some districts have hesitated to transition fully online out of fear that doing
so would expose them to legal liability for failing to provide equitable
education to all students. The Northshore School District in Washington State,
one of the first in the country to close in early March, launched an online
program immediately but put it on hold for two weeks to address equity concerns.
A lack of training or equipment means many rural or low-income districts are
also less able to rely on online instruction.
"The degree of being able to move to online learning at a moment's notice is
totally dependent on the wealth of the district," said Daniel Domenech, the
executive director of the national School Superintendents Association. "At best,
maybe 40 or 50% of districts are able to do that."
In Bronxville, the affluent New York City suburb that saw the state's first
major outbreak in March, the school district has many advantages that poorer
systems do not: Engaged parents, a student population that has near-universal
internet access, and plenty of laptops to distribute to families in need.
"I'm in a fortunate district," said Schools Superintendent Roy Montesano.
Many others are not so fortunate.
In Pennsylvania's Octorara district, where students receive a Chromebook laptop
starting in seventh grade, Orner, the superintendent, said she concluded that
going back to pencil and paper would shortchange her kids.
Around one-quarter of her students lack high-speed Internet access, so the
district recently bought 100 iPhones – Orner secured a $9,500 emergency state
grant to cover the cost – for students to use as mobile hotspots.
But she acknowledged that the most vulnerable students are also the likeliest to
fall behind even further.
"We talk about the summer slide," she said, referring to the months between
school academic years that sometimes causes students to slip backward. "Imagine
the summer slide on steroids."
As school districts grapple with new challenges, they look for solutions
wherever they can. Grand Coulee Dam just started to employ some distance
learning this week by setting up Google Classroom for those families able to
access it and loaning out some Chromebooks, even as it continues to rely on
pencil and paper classwork for students without internet.
Those packets, however, have to be carefully curated to ensure kids in poor
households have everything they need.
"You want them to measure something, you better put in a ruler," said Pam
Johnson, a ninth-grade Grand Coulee Dam teacher. "You want them to color
something, you better throw in a packet of crayons."
(Reporting by Joseph Ax in New York; Editing by Scott Malone and Aurora Ellis)
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