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		U.S. seeks 250,000 mentors, tutors to address pandemic learning loss
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		[July 05, 2022] 
		By Jeff Mason
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Biden 
		administration on Tuesday will launch a new effort to recruit 250,000 
		mentors and tutors to help students who have fallen back in their 
		learning during the coronavirus pandemic, the White House said.
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		Marisela Maddox, a parent of students Atlas and Hero Smookler, works as 
		a substitute teacher at the Austin Jewish Academy as the spread of the 
		Omicron variant leads to teacher shortages amid the coronavirus disease 
		(COVID-19) pandemic in Austin, Texas, U.S., January 20, 2022. 
		REUTERS/Callaghan O'Hare | 
	
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				| The 
				program, which will be led by AmeriCorps and the Department of 
				Education along with other service organizations, will seek to 
				get adults to fill the roles over the next three years.
 Students on average are two to four months behind in reading and 
				math as a result of the pandemic, a White House official said. 
				The program is intended to help address that deficit.
 
 "Research shows that high quality tutors and mentors positively 
				impact student achievement, well-being, and overall success," 
				the White House said in a statement.
 
 U.S. President Joe Biden will also call on schools to use $122 
				billion in funds provided by the American Rescue Plan COVID-relief 
				package to "provide high-quality tutoring, summer learning and 
				enrichment, and afterschool programs," the White House said.
 
 (Reporting by Jeff Mason; Editing by Paul Simao)
 
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