• =?UTF-8?Q?It=E2=80=99s_time_to_reject_mask_mandates=3B_Remote_learning?

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Tue Sep 19 11:19:20 2023
    It’s time to reject mask mandates
    BY MARGERY SMELKINSON AND LESLIE BIENEN, Sept 13, 2023

    The Covid-19 pandemic has made it acceptable to spend inordinate amounts of time hand-wringing about the possibility of getting infected with something, somehow, somewhere. Last winter, there were sensationalised headlines about an impending “
    tripledemic”, although it never materialised. This year, we received a dire warning that “Covid did not take a summer vacation” — except that hospitalisations have remained near an all-time low.

    With this unwarranted media frenzy comes the dusting off of the same old strategies: mask mandates and forced isolation, with concomitant absences from class and work, which are regularly foisted upon low-risk populations, predominantly students and
    health care workers.

    Morris Brown College in Atlanta has brought back mandatory masking for its students, and quite a few hospital systems are now reinstating mask requirements for their staff. Some large state universities such as University of Michigan and University of
    Maryland are banishing students from campus if they test positive. In Montgomery County, Maryland, some kindergarteners in public schools are required to don masks due to an “outbreak” in their class, with the possibility of asymptomatic testing and
    social distancing on the table.

    Well over halfway through 2023, how can this be?

    It’s happening because we never successfully cut the head off the dragon. That is, getting policymakers, including the CDC, to admit out loud that masks and many other mitigation efforts were pointless. Mandates went away because cases and
    hospitalisation rates were low, not because those who imposed them stopped believing in them. In Oregon, the state health authority believes in masks so much that it issued a permanent statewide indoor mask mandate, which is merely suspended when cases
    are low and can be reinstated when cases rise.

    We and others have written for this magazine, and elsewhere, debunking these “mitigation strategies” for the useless theatre that they are. As for masks, Cochrane, a global independent network of health researchers and professionals, conducted a meta-
    analysis in early 2023 of 17 randomised controlled trials and concluded that “[w]earing masks in the community probably makes little or no difference […] compared to not wearing masks.”

    This very large comprehensive study should have sealed the fate of mask recommendations once and for all but, perplexingly, America’s top health leaders have decided instead to dismiss the results. Both former CDC director Rochelle Walensky and former
    NIAID director Anthony Fauci were quick to minimise them.

    The unwillingness to accept defeat in the mitigation wars may be due to public health’s recently ramped-up compulsion to just “do something”. They must have forgotten the old medical school adage: “don’t just do something; stand there”,
    meaning that one shouldn’t impose useless treatments and interventions just for the sake of it.

    There is one prominent American, however, who appears unwilling to continue complying with the Covid theatre. President Biden, 80 years old and recently exposed to Covid, is supposed to wear a mask for 10 days, according to the current CDC guidance.
    Nevertheless, he said at a recent press conference, mask in hand, “they keep telling me, because this has to be 10 days or something, I’ve got to keep wearing it. But don’t tell them I didn’t have it on when I walked in.”

    If the President can resist the urge to “do something” about Covid, surely the rest of America’s policymakers can, too. The CDC should advise what is obvious to everyone else: stay home if you feel sick. Go out when you feel better. That would be
    doing something.

    Dr Margery Smelkinson is an infectious-disease scientist whose research has focused on influenza and SARS-CoV-2
    Dr Leslie Bienen works in health care policy

    https://unherd.com/thepost/why-wont-the-cdc-scrap-mask-mandates/

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    Remote learning likely widened racial, economic achievement gap
    by Liz Mineo, May 5, 2022, Harvard Gazette

    A new report on pandemic learning loss found that high-poverty schools both spent more weeks in remote instruction during 2020-21 and suffered large losses in achievement when they did so. Districts that remained largely in-person, however, lost
    relatively little ground. Experts predict the results will foreshadow a widening in measures of the nation’s racial and economic achievement gap.

    The report was a joint effort of the Center for Education Policy Research at Harvard University, the National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research at the American Institutes for Research, and NWEA, a nonprofit research and
    educational services provider. It analyzed achievement data from 2.1 million students in 10,000 schools across 49 states and is the first in a series that will be tracking the impact of catch-up efforts over the next two years.

    The Gazette spoke with economist Thomas Kane, Walter H. Gale Professor of Education and Economics at Harvard Graduate School of Education and center faculty director, about the findings. The interview was edited for length and clarity.

    Q&A with Thomas Kane
    GAZETTE: What is the magnitude of students’ learning loss due to the pandemic? Which school districts have been the most affected?

    KANE: We found that districts that spent more weeks in remote instruction lost more ground than districts that returned to in-person instruction sooner. Anyone who has been teaching by Zoom would not be surprised by that. The striking and important
    finding was that remote instruction had much more negative impacts in high-poverty schools. High-poverty schools were more likely to go remote and their students lost more when they did so. Both mattered, but the latter effect mattered more. To give you
    a sense of the magnitude: In high-poverty schools that were remote for more than half of 2021, the loss was about half of a school year’s worth of typical achievement growth.

    GAZETTE: What is the percentage of students who have experienced learning loss in the U.S.?

    KANE: There are 50 million students in the U.S. About 40 percent, or 20 million students, nationally were in schools that conducted classes remotely for less than four weeks, and 30 percent, or 15 million students, remained in remote instruction for more
    than 16 weeks. In other words, about 40 percent spent less than a month in remote instruction, but about 30 percent spent more than four months in remote instruction. It is the dramatic growth in educational inequity in those districts that remained
    remote that should worry us.

    GAZETTE: Are we at risk of losing the educational gains of the last three decades? How could this impact the racial achievement gap?

    KANE: Over the last 30 years, there has been like a gradual closing in both the Black-white and Hispanic-white achievement gaps. The federal government has been administering an assessment to a nationally representative sample every couple of years, the
    National Assessment of Educational Progress. Gaps have been narrowing for the last 30 years.

    The latest assessment was conducted between January and March of 2022. Our results imply that when those results come out later this year (likely in October, before the midterm election) there will be a decline nationally, especially in states where
    schools remained remote, and gaps will widen sharply for the first time in a generation. What we should be focused on now is ensuring that the widening gaps do not become permanent. By helping students catch up over the next few years, I hope we can
    reduce the gaps again when the next NAEP assessment is collected in 2024.

    Interestingly, gaps in math achievement by race and school poverty did not widen in school districts in states such as Texas and Florida and elsewhere that remained largely in-person. Where schools remained in-person, gaps did not widen. Where schools
    shifted to remote learning, gaps widened sharply. Shifting to remote instruction was like turning a switch on a critical piece of our social infrastructure that we had taken for granted. Our findings imply that public schools truly are the “balance
    wheel of the social machinery,” as Horace Mann would say.

    GAZETTE: In which ways can learning loss affect high school graduation and college application rates and students’ life opportunities?

    KANE: Some observers are going to say that we are too focused on the decline in test scores. However, given past relationships between test scores and other life outcomes, we would expect the achievement declines to translate into lower high school
    graduation rates (since students may not have the math or reading skills required for upper-level courses), lower college-going rates, and lower earnings. Recall that not every group of students saw the same decline — high-poverty schools were more
    likely to go remote and suffered larger losses when they did so. To be more concrete, students in high-poverty schools that were remote for more than half of 2020-21 would be expected to see a 5 percent decline in average earnings over their career,
    given past relationships between test scores and earnings. That may not sound like much, but when calculating losses for all 50 million students in K-12 education in the U.S., it would amount to a $2 trillion decline in lifetime earnings. It’s in that
    context that the $190 billion that the federal government has provided in supplemental aid for schools since the pandemic began sounds like a good investment, if it could be used to reduce the losses.

    GAZETTE: What should school districts and states do to help students recover from their learning losses?

    KANE: School districts need to start by assessing the magnitude of their losses and then assembling a package of interventions that is commensurate with their losses. Districts that remained remote during 2020-21 — especially the higher-poverty schools
    in those districts — lost the most ground and will need to spend more of their federal aid on academic recovery. It’s all about magnitudes. From prior to the pandemic, we have estimates of the impact of interventions such as high-dosage tutoring or
    summer school or double periods of math instruction. Each district should start this summer by taking the estimates of the impact of each of those interventions, multiply each by the share of students they plan to serve under each and make sure the sum
    of expected effects adds up to the size of the loss their students have suffered. That’s going to be an eye-opening calculation for most districts, since most districts I see are planning intensive interventions for 10 or 15 percent of their students,
    some voluntary summer school — and that’s about it. A barely-more-than-normal recovery effort such as that is going to be nowhere near enough in many districts.

    Here’s an example. The students in high-poverty schools that were remote for most of 2020-21 lost about 0.45 standard deviations in math. There are very few educational interventions that have ever been shown to have an impact that large. One example
    is high-dosage tutoring — which involves tutoring sessions two to three times per week in groups of one to four students with a trained tutor all year. Pre-pandemic research implied that such a program would generate about 0.38 standard deviations. In
    other words, a district could provide a high-quality tutor to every single one of the students in a high-poverty school and still not expect to make up the decline. Of course, given the inevitable problems of maintaining quality while scaling up such
    interventions, the expected impacts from pre-pandemic research are likely to be over-optimistic. But districts need to start with a plan, which is commensurate with their losses and then scale up or scale down as necessary over the next couple of years.

    GAZETTE: The federal government gave $190 billion to schools across the country for academic recovery. Is that enough?

    KANE: Based on our estimates, those dollars would be enough if school districts, especially the high-poverty school districts that were remote for much of 2021, were to spend nearly all of it on academic recovery. Unfortunately, a lot of those funds
    have been going to things that weren’t necessarily related to academic recovery. That’s why we’re trying to sound the alarm now before those dollars are committed to other things.

    School districts have never been through a disruption of this magnitude before. School districts have until the end of 2024 to spend the federal aid for academic recovery. Most of the district plans I have seen are undersized. Of course, districts will
    eventually learn that their efforts are not sufficient. However, the great danger is that they will realize that too late — after they have committed the federal aid.

    You wouldn’t try to patch a hole without making sure that the patch was as big as the hole. Very few school districts have done the math to figure out if the effect sizes of the interventions that they’re planning and the share of students to be
    served by each match the loss their students have endured. Troublingly, there’s nothing about the federal process that requires that district plans are commensurate with their losses, even on paper.

    It’s worse than that. The American Rescue Plan — passed in March 2021, before the magnitude of the losses were clear — only requires districts to spend 20 percent of the federal aid on academic recovery. Most districts seem to be following the
    federal guidance, and spending between 20 and 30 percent on academic recovery. That’s not going to be nearly enough in the lower-income districts that spent much of 2020-21 in remote instruction. Local business leaders, parents, and school boards need
    to engage with their school districts and make sure that the district recovery plans are commensurate with the losses. If not, these achievement losses will become permanent.

    https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2022/05/remote-learning-likely-widened-racial-economic-achievement-gap/

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    It’s Still 2020 for the Class of ’27
    By Leslie Bienen and Margery Smelkinson, Sept. 11, 2023, WSJ
    If you’re a member of the class of 2027, you may arrive on your college campus and wonder if you’ve traveled back in time to 2020. Young people were always at low risk and the Covid pandemic is over, but in much of academia it seems it will never end.

    Claudia Trevor-Wright “noted that protections are especially important now, as colleges approach the upcoming fall semester with ‘far fewer resources for data collection and tracking COVID in the community, fewer or no options for free COVID testing,
    ” Inside Higher Ed reported last month. Ms. Trevor-Wright is project director of the American College Health Association’s Campus Covid-19 Vaccine Initiative.

    College administrators are thinking along similar lines. Atlanta’s Morris Brown College made news last month by reviving a mask mandate; some universities never gave up vaccine requirements. Most still purport to require that students isolate after
    testing positive. A few examples:

    • The University of Michigan instructs students who test positive “You will need to leave your residence hall during your isolation.” Relocation housing must be reachable by car “in under one day,” and students must attest that “only one
    other person will be in the car during the drive.”

    • Massachusetts’ Amherst College orders: “All people who have a positive test must isolate for the first five days.” If you’re exposed but not infected, “you must wear a mask any time you are around others inside your home or indoors in
    public.”

    • The University of Maryland recently updated its guidance to instruct students who test positive to leave campus for five days and wear masks for 10. For 10 days after a positive test, even those who have recovered are ordered “do not go places
    where you are unable to wear a mask” and “you should not eat in restaurants or dine with others.”

    • Maryland’s Goucher College decrees that “all students living on campus must have an isolation plan” and also demands that “any unvaccinated student who was in Close Contact with an individual who has tested positive for COVID-19 must
    quarantine.”

    These onerous rules are likely to make students sicker. Students with Covid-like symptoms will stay away from the campus health clinic for fear they will be tested and summarily sent off campus. They may end up circulating infections such as flu, strep
    or mononucleosis. Those who do leave campus with Covid will encounter elderly people, who are at higher risk. It’s hard to think of a more useless and ill-conceived “mitigation” policy.

    Dr. Bienen is a veterinarian who researches zoonotic diseases and public-health policy. Ms. Smelkinson is an infectious-disease scientist whose research has focused on influenza and SARS-CoV-2.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/its-still-2020-for-the-class-of-27-education-wellness-covid-vaccine-college-student-testing-mandate-masks-106ab734

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