Department of Ed to Survey on Status of School Reopenings

The U.S. Department of Education will be running a survey to understand the status of in-person learning at the nation's schools. The Institute of Education Sciences (IES) will oversee the project, dubbed the "NAEP 2021 School Survey." Currently, the agency noted, there isn't enough data to understand the status of school re-opening or how students are learning. The survey is intended to fill that gap.

The announcement came on the heels of President Biden's Jan. 21 Executive Order to ensure "the collection of data necessary to fully understand the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on students and educators, including data on the status of in-person learning."

Data collection will be handled by IES' National Center for Education Statistics and will include questions about:

  • Whether schools are open with full-time, in-person instruction, open with online and in-person instruction or fully remote;

  • Enrollment by instructional mode and attendance rates by race/ethnicity, socio-economic status, English learner status, and disability status;

  • Frequency of in-person learning for students;

  • The average number of hours of synchronous instruction for students in remote instruction mode; and

  • Student groups prioritized by schools for in-person instruction by selected school characteristics.

Analysis will examine findings based on student demographics, including race, ethnicity, disability, English-language-learner status and free or reduced lunch status or other indicators of family income.

"President Biden is committed to the safe reopening of schools and to addressing the educational disparities and inequities that the pandemic has exposed and exacerbated," said Ian Rosenblum, acting assistant secretary of the Office of Elementary and Secondary Education, in a statement. "To do that, we need more information about how students are learning during this pandemic--and we simply don't have it right now. The administration, educators, parents and education leaders need meaningful data in order to achieve these critical goals, and this survey will give them that."

"It's critically important to get a sense of how students are learning," added James Lynn Woodworth, commissioner of the National Center for Education Statistics. "NCES will use this data to both provide the most accurate immediate view about school operating statuses and to better interpret the impact of current school operations on the results of the NAEP assessments scheduled to be conducted in 2022."

The survey will collect data from about 3,500 schools that enroll fourth-graders and an equal number of schools that enroll eighth-graders. Those are the same grades that participate in NAEP testing, otherwise known as the Nation's Report Card. And, in fact, the same online data collection systems and infrastructure used for NAEP will also be used for this project.

The surveying will take place monthly, starting this month, and continue through June 2021. Findings will be reported.

Additional information is openly available on the NAEP website.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • Harvard Announces Replacement Facility for Native American Program

    Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., recently announced that construction will begin this spring on a new home for its Native American Program, according to university news. The 6,500-square-foot, all-electric building will stand three stories and serve as the central hub for the Harvard University Native American Program (HUNAP).

  • University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Launches New Emergency Communications System

    The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga (UTC) recently deployed a new emergency notification and incident management system for its campus, according to a news release. The university partnered with 911Cellular to launch Safe@UTC, a smartphone app allowing university officials to communicate and respond during emergency situations.

  • Stanford Completes Construction on Graduate School of Education Facility

    Stanford University in Stanford, Calif., recently announced the end of construction on a new home for its Graduate School of Education, according to a news release. The university partnered with McCarthy Building Companies on the 160,000-square-foot project, which involved two major renovations and one new construction effort.

  • University of Arizona Approves New Residence Hall

    The Arizona Board of Regents recently approved plans for a new residence hall at the University of Arizona in Tucson, Ariz., according to a news release. The new facility is scheduled to open in fall 2028 and have the capacity for more than 1,200 students, enforcing a new university expectation that all first-year students live on campus.