8/7

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FRIDAY 8/7

FEDERAL

Phase 4:
  • Negotiations appear to have stalled.  According to the Hill, Democratic leaders offered to reduce their $3.4 trillion package tag by $1 trillion if Republicans would agree to raise their roughly $1 trillion package by the same amount. The effort was an attempt to split the difference between the two sides but was rejected by the White House. 
  • Friday evening, President Trump said he was preparing to sign executive orders that would defer payroll taxes, pay unemployment benefits through the end of the year, offer eviction protections, and also provide student loan relief.
  • Our government affairs partners still believe there will be a deal sometime within the next two weeks as pressure mounts due to pain felt from the expired UI benefits and eviction moratorium as well as the costs with reopening schools.  
  • From our partners at EdCounsel:  Overview of the Negotiations Process and Comparison the federal bills.
Fauci:  Cautiously supports sending kids back to school
  • “The default principle should be to try as best you can to get the children back to school.  The big, however, and qualifier in there is that you have to have a degree of flexibility. The flexibility means if you look at the map of our country, we are not unidimensional with regard to the level of infection.”
  • “The bottom line is everybody should try within the context of the level of infection that you have to get the kids back to school, but the primary consideration … should be the safety, health and the welfare of the children, as well as the teachers and the potential secondary effects on parents and family members."
Jobs Report:  The economy added 1.8 million jobs during the month of July and the unemployment rate fell to 10.2%.  While the numbers edge out  economic forecasts, they also suggest a possible slowing down of the recovery.  More than 30 million people are currently receiving some form of unemployment insurance.  
STATE

Arizona:  Governor Ducey, ADE, Helios Education Foundation, and ASU launch virtual teacher training institute to support Arizona teachers and students run by ASU Prep Digital Prep.

Illinois:  School district has a dress code for remote learners:  no PJs.

Kentucky:  Kentucky Education Association urges schools not to reopen for in-person classes 

New York:  The Governor announced that all schools can reopen.  Schools can decide to open as long as they are in a region where the average rate of positive coronavirus tests is below 5 percent over a two- week period.  

Pennsylvania:  Schools are facing bus driver shortages


INTERNATIONAL

Italy:  Schools begin to reopen.  Where possible, classes will be moved outdoors, or to theaters, parks and museums.

Germany:  Two schools close due to outbreaks.


ECONOMIC RECOVERY

Middle Class Prosperity:  Good piece from the NYT's economics reporter Jim Tankersley:  How expanding opportunity for women, immigrants and nonwhite workers helped everyone — and why we need to do so again. "The hopeful truth is that when Americans band together to force open the gates of opportunity for women, for Black men, for the groups that have long been oppressed in our economy, everyone gets ahead."


LEARNING PODS

Once Marginalized, Homeschooling Hits the Mainstream:  Homeschool filings in Nebraska were up 20 percent as of late July, and in Vermont they increased by about 75 percent over the same time in 2019.

Businesses and Nonprofits Open Space for Learning Pods:  Article about how businesses and nonprofits in Lafayette, LA are providing space and wifi for students during remote learning.  

Pods In Boston:  How families are using Thepodsquad.com or kidzpodz.com to find other parents for pods.

Crossroads Learning Pods:  An initiative in Indiana consisting of a small group of students who meet in-person to complete e-learning assignments with the help of a Learning Pod Director.

YMCA:  In Columbus, Ohio the YMCA is offering learning pods for students ages five to 16 who are attending school virtually. Students can be dropped off as early as 6 a.m., and the learning sessions will begin at 8 a.m. All students are required to bring their Chromebooks to complete their assignments, and staff will be ready to assist them

Children's Discovery Museum:  Will introduce Learning Pods to give children an opportunity to learn through play, all while maintaining a similar structure to a regular school day.  They are offering half-day and full-day options for older children, ages 5 to 10.  Tuition for the older children, ages 5-10, will be $250 per week for the full-day pod or $150 per week for the half-day pod. The Little Pod tuition will be $40 per week for Tuesdays and Thursdays, or $25 per day. Learning Pods and Little Pods are both drop-off programs.

Pod School Prep: “Our program is designed to support virtual school programs that public schools are working very hard to put out. Don’t leave your public school. Keep your funding in the public school. Find a way to fill in the support piece, the child care piece, the tutoring piece,” said Sarah Kurtz McKinnon, Founder of Pod School Prep.

Boston Public Schools:  Will support some pods.

RESOURCES

Your School District's Reopening Survey:  Funny, because...
How would you describe this spring’s remote learning experience for your family?
1. Streamlined and efficient — a welcome break!
2. Reminiscent of scenes from Home Alone
3. Reminiscent of scenes from Contagion
4. A hotbed of despair and criminal activity

The Hybrid Model will combine the key elements of in-person instruction with remote learning, which we hopefully perfected this spring. Your child will be divided into a cohort (A, B, AB, BC, CC, XVY, MCXLVII, and Depeche Mode) based on careful consideration of his or her learning style, social-emotional needs, friendships, and an algorithm our intern designed this summer.

Half of Districts to Reopen:  The Center on Reinventing Public Education (CRPE) released data from a sample of 477 districts and found that as of the end of July, 40% of districts that have announced reopening plans favor full in-person instruction this fall, and 51% of school districts with announced plans will provide in-person learning at least partially through a hybrid model.
Proof-of-Work Mechanisms: Super fascinating essay exploring the signaling underlying so many Instagram, TikTok posts and how it might apply to learning.  

Why It’s (Mostly) Safe to Reopen the Schools:  Great long essay covering the tensions and challenges.  
NWEA Releases Guidance on Remote Testing:  New report on lessons learned from administering 400,000 remote tests.  Helpful for state and district leaders thinking about 2020-2021 assessments.

OpEds: 
Portraits of Immigrants:  President George W. Bush announced his new book entitled Out of Many, One: Portraits of America’s Immigrants, which features the portraits and stories forty-three individuals who exemplify our proud history as a nation of immigrants.

It's The Weekend:  Go find a puddle.
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8/5

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WEDNESDAY 8/5 

FEDERAL

Reopening Debate:

Phase 4:  
  • According to NBC News, Senate McConnell conceded that he will lack Republican support to pass a package and instead will rely on Democrats to negotiate a deal with the White House. “If you’re looking for total consensus among Republican senators, you’re not going to find it. We do have division about what to do.”
  • The White House signaled a concession on expanded UI - $400 per week until December 15 along with an extension of the eviction moratorium until December 15 and $200 billion for state stabilization.  There is still no agreement on education funding, childcare (Democrats want $50 billion and Republicans are at $15 billion).  The US Postal Service has also become a flashpoint due to mail-in voting.  Democrats want $25 billion and Republicans offered $10 billion.
  • Related, "Many economists expect last week’s expiration of $600 in enhanced weekly unemployment benefits to lead to a sharp drop-off in household spending and a setback for the U.S. economy’s near-term recovery, even if the lapse turns out to be temporary."

STATE

As of August 5, 12 of the 15 largest school districts are choosing remote learning only as their back-to-school instructional model, affecting over 3.2 million students. Via EdWeek.

Alabama:  Jefferson County Schools will start the year remotely.  A survey of parents found that 56% preferred online instruction compared to 44% who wanted to start the school year with a traditional classroom setting.

Colorado:  Children's Hospital released "Guidelines for Managing COVID-19 with Schools Reopening"  along with Charting Pediatrics podcast designed to help school administrators and board members determine how they can most safely reopen their schools for in-person learning.

Florida:  The Florida Education Association filed an emergency hearing on Aug. 3 to block reopening brick and mortar schools while a lawsuit against the state is pending.

Georgia:  Five employees tested positive on the first data of school for Marietta City Schools.

Idaho:  Boise schools will open remotely.

Illinois:  
  • Chicago, the nation’s third-largest district, will begin the new school year remotely.  "The decision to keep kids at home is an abrupt about-face from city officials who have faced heavy pressure from teachers and parents to go fully remote over health concerns during a pandemic, and who only four days ago asked families to decide whether their children would take part in the district’s in-person plan."
  • The state's largest teachers union is creating a medical review panel it says will judge whether individual school districts' reopening plans are safe.
Indiana:  Dr. Kris Box, Indiana's state health commissioner said schools could safely reopen. 

Massachusetts:  Somerville Public Schools will start the school year remotely.

Michigan:  A new poll finds that half of Michigan residents don’t believe it’s safe for children to return to in-person classroom learning.

Mississippi:  The Governor issued an order requiring any county that has more than 200 cases or more than 500 cases per 100,000 people will have to delay back to school start dates.

Tennessee:  Out of the 50 school districts who have reopened, at least 14 have confirmed COVID-19 cases.

Texas: A useful list of start dates and reopening plans for all east Texas schools.  

Washington:  Rainier, Woodland, Toledo, Winlock, and Kalama schools will all open remotely.  


International

Bolivia:  Just canceled the entire school year.  

UK:  Anne Elizabeth Longfield, the Children's Commissioner for England, said "Schools should be last to close and first to reopen in the event of a second wave of Covid-19, with regular testing for pupils and teachers to reassure parents and keep schools safe."


RESOURCES

Learning Pods:
  • Interesting article in Vogue from a parent's perspective with pods.  It starts with, " Last week I started crying for no apparent reason while I was making lunch. I was running on fumes and was wondering how I was going to finish an assignment that was due in a few days" and ends with "By this measure, the creation of these pods is yet another example of parents filling the holes created by our broken system. Here’s the rub: if the quarantine has amplified the social inequities in our educational system, sadly our solutions reveal our haste to throw money at immediate problems – as well as exposing our tacit refusal to pay attention to the root cause."
  • "We watched as this phenomenon that these learning pods have just taken off throughout the country and in Texas,” said Angie Mock, CEO of Boys and Girls Club of San Antonio. "And what we've decided to do is we are going to execute a similar strategy, but for low income kids."
  • In South Carolina, a Facebook pod group has 300 members.  The article also talked about a $7,900 a year microschool costing parents $12 an hour.
  • Article of a pod group in Texas.  Kids will be learning virtually with the teacher of their school district, but when it comes time for the kids to do a task the teacher assigned, the four families have hired a tutor. 
  • A New Jersey pod group pulls in a variety of teachers.
  • A group of mothers in Fort Collins, CO is working to help connect families with one another to form schooling pods.  In less than two weeks, they have more than 1,000 members.
  • Brit+Co published a Playbook for Organizing a Pandemic Pod This Fall
  • Swing Education launched a new service, called “Bubbles.” The idea is to match family requests with teachers based on geography, age groups, teaching styles and subject expertise. Each pod is capped at eight students, who gather with their teacher at one of the family’s homes for about 25 hours each week.
  • Tom Vander Ark on how microschools meet the moment.  
Why Are Child Care Programs Open When Schools Are Not?:  NYT article.  "A recent survey by the National Association for the Education of Young Children of more than 5,000 child care providers from all 50 states, Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico found that about half of the nation’s child care programs may close by December, absent additional government assistance. Unlike public schools, for most child care programs, temporary closure or reduced group sizes because of pandemic health concerns is a pathway to shuttering permanently."

The US Has A COVID Data Problem:  "It's like we're flying blind."

The Difficulty in Modeling COVID:  Future deaths are even harder to predict than the course of a hurricane.  “You make better forecasts when you make multiple models,” said Nick Reich, an epidemiologist at the University of Massachusetts School of Public Health. “If you rely on just one model, you’re going to be disappointed.”  The CDC is funding Covid-19 ForecastHub which analyzes two dozen models for a consensus forecast.

Ventilation Should Be Part of the Conversation on School Reopening:  Article in Stat, "As a result of months of misapplied focus on surface disinfection, the importance of air circulation and the potential use of filtration is missing from the national debate on school reopening."

Put It In Airplane Mode:   Apparently the astronauts encountered a problem loading a customized SpaceX app on an iPad Mini.  The solution was putting it into airplane mode.  That has nothing to do with COVID or schools but I thought it was interesting.  

Vaccine Tracker:  Via NYT.
Risk Reduction Strategies for Reopening Schools:  Guide from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
We Need:  More birthday parades.
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8/4

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TUESDAY 8/4

FEDERAL

Phase 4:  
  • Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told Senate Republicans that negotiators are no closer to a coronavirus relief deal than they were last week. Politico reported that Republicans have expressed interest in supporting SNAP, USPS money and broadband. There may also be some modest agreement on housing policy -- eviction moratorium and mortgage forbearance.
  • A separate Politico story reports the White House is considering three executive orders:  delay the collection of federal payroll taxes, reinstitute an expired eviction moratorium, and extend enhanced federal unemployment benefits using unspent money already appropriated by Congress.
Fauci:
STATE

Seven Governors Form Testing Consortium:  Governors representing Virginia, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, North Carolina and Ohio, and Maryland have formed a first-of-its-kind purchasing compact they hope will pressure companies that make rapid-detection tests to quickly ramp up production for 500,000 rapid tests, for a total of 3.5 million.  The Rockefeller Foundation is willing to act as the financing entity if needed.

15 Largest Districts:  What their plans are for reopening. 

Arizona:  Superintendent of Public Instruction Hoffman released a statement "As school leaders, we should prepare our families and teachers for the reality that it is unlikely that any school community will be able to reopen safely for traditional in-person or hybrid instructions by August 17th."

California:  LA reached a deal with the teachers union with teachers being requires to provide only 3 hours of live instruction per day.

Delaware:   Based on a review of COVID-19 data in Delaware, Governor Carney and the Delaware Division of Public Health (DPH) announced that schools may open under a hybrid scenario next month, with a mix of in-person and remote instruction and significant safety precautions to limit transmission of COVID-19.

Idaho: Is the only state skipping the Pandemic EBT (P-EBT) program.

Massachusetts:   The American Federation of Teachers Massachusetts called for schools to start remotely, even though the community positively rate was only 2.2%.

Michigan:  Kalamazoo Public Schools will start the school year Aug. 31 using distance learning.

Tennessee: The Tennessee Education Association is asking the state to delay school reopening and in-person instruction, saying the risk of further spreading COVID-19 is still too high to support in-person classes.

UtahArticle discussing the nursing shortage during COVID.


INTERNATIONAL

Generational Catastrophe:  United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres warned Tuesday that the world faces a “generational catastrophe” because so many schools have been closed because of the coronavirus pandemic.  "“Getting students back into schools and learning institutions as safely as possible must be a top priority.”

Scotland:  Thousands of students received worse results than they had been expecting after the country's exam body lowered 125,000 estimated grades - a quarter of the total.  "Around a quarter of all entries. 6.9% of those estimates were adjusted up and 93.1% were adjusted down, with 96% of all adjusted grades changed by one grade."
ECONOMIC RECOVERY

1/3 of NYC Small Businesses: May be gone forever.

How Work Changed During COVID:  NBER paper:  "Using de- identified, aggregated meeting and email meta-data from 3,143,270 users, we find, compared to pre- pandemic levels, increases in the number of meetings per person (+12.9 percent) and the number of attendees per meeting (+13.5 percent), but decreases in the average length of meetings (-20.1 percent). Collectively, the net effect is that people spent less time in meetings per day (-11.5 percent) in the post- lockdown period. We also find significant and durable increases in length of the average workday (+8.2 percent, or +48.5 minutes), along with short-term increases in email activity.

Workforce Development Accelerator:  Colorado Thrives has partnered with Techstars, ZOMALAB and Strada Education Network to launch the Workforce Development Accelerator designed to address the challenges of the current labor market through innovative technologies, business models and solutions. The accelerator will work with 10 startups and two nonprofit organizations each year to help them accelerate their businesses through focused curriculum and hands-on mentorship.  The program will begin accepting applications from nonprofit entrepreneurs interested in participating in the 2020 program.  Nonprofits interested in participating in this program are encouraged to learn more by visiting the program page and may apply here. Applications will be received for one month, closing on August 30,2020. An information session will be held on August 11th from 1:30-2:30 MT for nonprofits to learn more about the program, information about key timelines, the types of nonprofits the accelerator is interested in, and an open Q&A.


RESOURCES

Learning Pods:
VELA Education Fund Launches with $1M Meet the Moment Grant Program:  VELA Education Fund announced a $1 million Meet the Moment grant program to support families, educators and innovators building and leading innovative initiatives to support continued student learning. Partners include the Walton Family Foundation, Charles Koch Institute, 4.0 Schools, Camelback Ventures, HSLDA, and NPU.  Initial grants include:
  • Prenda, a launchpad, tech solution, and network for microschools. Prenda combines flexible learning environments, cutting-edge techniques, human-centered technology, and passionate people to help children develop creativity, problem-solving, and 21st-century skills
  • 100 Roads, an incubator for co-learning communities and microschools, which provides workshops, resources, and a knowledge base for innovators starting their own educational models and spaces.
  • Hybrid homeschool research, which will study the hundreds of mixed options across the country where students attend formal classes in a brick-and-mortar school for part of the week and are homeschooled for the rest of the week. Researchers are exploring what it takes for hybrid homeschools to grow beyond early adopters and into the mainstream.

Child Transmission:  New study published in the Lancet that found schools and nurseries linked to just 45 COVID cases in Australia.

Support for a National Strategy:  NPR/Ipsos poll found that two-thirds of respondents said they believe the U.S. is handling the pandemic worse than other countries, and most want the federal government to take extensive action to slow the spread of the coronavirus, favoring a top-down approach to reopening schools and businesses.
Parents’ Perspectives on the Effects of COVID-19 on K-12 Education:  Via USC
Options Other Than Reopening Schools:  Via the Atlantic.

Struggling to Thrive as a Large Team Working Remotely? Great set of tips from FirstRound.

Surge In Private School Enrollments:  Private schools offering in-person classes report increased enrollment.
.
The Price Students Pay When Schools Are Closed:  Via Paul Peterson
  • Economists have estimated that each additional year of schooling yields a return over an economic lifetime of somewhere between 8 percent to 13 percent, with consensus estimates hovering around a 10 percent return.
  • Teacher strikes are the second most frequent cause of school closures. During the first decade of this century a series of strikes in Ontario, Canada adversely affected growth in elementary-student test performance.
  • Virtual learning is very likely better than no education at all, but at its present stage of development, it remains a poor substitute for classroom instruction in elementary and secondary schools.
  • Students who have higher-quality teachers are more likely to perform better on standard tests, graduate from college, earn more during their productive years, and avoid incarceration.

What Scientists Are Learning About Kids and COVID-19:  Via Vox.
  • The CDC says that children under the age of 18 account for less than 7 percent of US Covid-19 cases and less than 0.1 percent of the deaths.
  • The American Academy of Pediatrics estimates that somewhere between 0.6 percent and 9 percent of pediatric Covid-19 cases result in hospitalization. A preprint study that has not yet been peer-reviewed of 31 household clusters in five countries found that 12 percent of children had severe cases.
  • One study published in Nature in June with data from six countries suggests kids under the age of 20 are about half as likely to get sick after exposure as adults; other studies in Israel, the Netherlands, and Switzerland consistently report children get infected less easily than adults.

Measuring Student Growth:  New report from the Data Quality Campaign, Alliance for Excellent Education and Collaborative for Student Success 
FDA Warning:  On 100 hand sanitizers.

NGA is Hiring:  Deputy for Center for Best Practices.

New COVID-19 Forecast Model:  Harvard Global Health Institute, Google released the COVID-19 Public Forecasts, a set of models that provide projections of COVID-19 cases, deaths, ICU utilization, ventilator availability, and other metrics over the next 14 days for U.S. counties and states. The models are trained on public data such as those from Johns Hopkins University, Descartes Labs, and the United States Census Bureau, and Google says they’ll continue to be updated with guidance from its collaborators at Harvard.

Parents Struggle as Schools Reopen:  "We have kept them protected for so long,” said Adamus, who said her aunt died from COVID-19 in Alabama and her husband’s great-uncle succumbed to the virus in a New Jersey nursing home. “They haven’t been to restaurants. We only go to parks if no one else is there. We don’t take them to the grocery store. And now they’re going to be in the classroom with however many kids for an entire day with a teacher.”

OpEds: Alabama Principal: Can't touch this.
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8/3

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MONDAY 8/3

FEDERAL

Phase 4:
  • HEALS Act comparison to HEROES Act and current law from our partners at Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck.
  • Negotiations continued over the weekend but the sides still seem far apart on expanded UI, school funding, and state stabilization.  The goal of a compromise agreement by the end of the week seems less and less realistic given the vast distances.  The protracted negotiations will help Democrats get more of their priorities in a final bill, which also will push up its price tag. Timing is still mid August but it could creep into September given recess. 
  • Interesting visualization from the NYT on the two plans:
Positivity Rate Guidance:  One of the major issues facing Governors, state chiefs, and superintendents is the level of community spread (positivity) that should trigger closing schools and switching to remote learning.  Unfortunately, not only has there been a lack of federal guidance, but various federal officials have recommended different thresholds.  The Surgeon General has said schools can open when the positivity rate is less than 10%.  The WHO and several governors have said less than 5%.  NYC has set a threshold of 3%.  On Sunday during an interview on CNN's "State of the Union," Dr. Birx was asked about a recommendation from the CDC Director Robert Redfield who also supported a 5% positivity rate.  "I certainly would endorse what Dr. Redfield is saying. In the areas where we have this widespread case increase, we need to stop the cases, and then we can talk about safely reopening."  It looks as if there's a consensus forming that students can return to school if positivity rates are under 5%.  Anything above should trigger online learning."   


STATE

Teacher Protests:   California:  Oakland School District and the teachers union are still at odds over negotiating distance learning for the fall.  The district is proposing more time than the union for live (synchronous) instruction, as well as recorded lessons or other assignments (asynchronous) at all grade levels.

Colorado:   Parents agonize over decision about schools— especially those who feel they have no choice. "A lot of parents either are essential workers or they don’t have a flexible job,” Warstler said. “I wish the schools would try to create a more flexible plan for students. Of course we care about the teachers. We don’t want them to get sick. But sometimes we don’t have an option. It’s even harder when parents are single.”

DOD:  Majority of DOD schools plan to reopen in person.  

Georgia:   
  • Gwinnett County Public School, the largest school district in the state, reported that 260 employees have tested positive.
  • A teenage boy lost both parents to COVID-19 just four days apart.
  • Dozens of people were outside the Cobb County Civic Center protesting the move by Cobb County Schools to open the fall session in a virtual-only format.
  • CDC study on COVID transmission within a Georgia camp. 260 campers and staff tested positive out of 344 test results available. Among those ages 6-10, 51% got the virus; from 11-17 years old, 44%, and 18-21 years old, 33%.  Important to note that this was an overnight camp where "The campers did a lot of singing and shouting; did not wear face masks; and windows were not opened for ventilation."  However the CDC did conclude that the virus “spread efficiently in a youth-centric overnight setting, resulting in high attack rates among persons in all age groups,” many showing no symptoms.
Maryland:  On Friday, Montgomery County health officials ordered that all private schools would be required to remain closed through October 1 and should instead start the school year online.  The order was criticized by private schools and the Governor.  It led to the Governor issuing an emergency order on Monday blocking the Montgomery county order.

Mississippi:  OpEd on the importance of closing the digital divide. "It is unacceptable that poverty has prevented our students from attending school fully this year."

Missouri:  
  • A group of parents within the have formed a “Reopen Springfield Schools” Facebook Group, planned a rally protesting the re-entry plans and three families are filing a lawsuit against the school.  "The lawsuit petitions the court for temporary injunctive relief against the reopening plan. It asks for families to have the right to allow kids to attend in-person classes for five days a week. Springfield’s plan allows kids to only attend classes two days a week with three days as virtual learning. The lawsuit focusses on kids with disabilities."
  • Republic schools superintendent Matt Pearce tested positive for COVID-19.
New York:  
  • NYC will only reopen schools if the positivity rate is below 3%.  For context, Gov. Cuomo has set 5% as the target based on WHO guidance.  
  • As many as 17% of 1,707 public-school principals may call it quits this year.  403 NYC principals, or 24%, are over age 55 and considered at high risk for COVID.
Pennsylvania:  A school is experimenting using a robot with UBC and UVC lights to clean rooms.  

Utah:  Data shows inconsistent closures of childcare facilities during COVID-19 outbreaks.

Virginia:  Parents rally to open schools.   


INTERNATIONAL

One Billion Out of School:  New WEF paper:
  • "COVID-19 is now mutating into a global education emergency. Millions of children, especially the poorest and young girls, stand to lose the learning opportunities that could transform their lives. Because education is so closely tied to future prosperity, job creation, and improved health, a setback on this scale would undermine countries’ progress, reinforcing already extreme inequalities."
  • "Pathbreaking research on the impact of the 2005 earthquake in Kashmir, Pakistan captures the risk to learning. Schools were closed for three months. When they reopened, attendance quickly recovered. But four years later, children aged between three and 15 who lived closest to the fault line had lost the equivalent of 1.5 years of learning."
  • "Increased international financing is critical. Most of the world’s poorest countries, especially in Africa, entered the economic downturn with limited fiscal space. That room for maneuver is now shrinking further as recession bites and external-debt problems intensify."

Canada:   Elementary students in Ontario will be heading back to school full-time while most high school students will do a hybrid model.  Students in grades 4-12 will be required to wear a mask. 

Germany:  Schools are beginning to reopen.  Classes have been reorganized, creating so-called "cohorts" groups of several hundred students. The "cohorts" are advised to stay apart, but social distancing rules are being done away with within each group. Classes are being scheduled on a staggered basis. Each cohort has its own area in the school grounds, cloakrooms, restrooms and cafeterias.  "The most important thing is to go back to school and avoid falling further behind, otherwise we risk having a lost generation" said Kay Czerwinski, a member of a local parents' association."

UK:  COVID-19 puts a strain on private schools.  "This summer Eton College—the boarding school famous for having produced 20 British prime ministers—began offering free video courses to teenagers at state schools, via EtonX, its online platform. Eton’s headmaster has told Tatler, a high-society magazine, that “the right thing now is to share our wealth, resources and expertise”. Harrow Online too will go some way to opening up the most elite institutions to a wider pool of students (though, at £15,000 a year, it is hardly widely attainable)."

Zambia:  Policy brief on the impact of COVID-19 on students.  "The risk of gaps widening in learning is higher now among children from families that can afford and those that cannot afford to access facilities that enable distance learning modalities. Poor and vulnerable children will continue to lag in education access."


ECONOMIC RECOVERY

Visualizing Vulnerable Jobs Across America: A new interactive tool from Brookings to help local policymakers better understand job vulnerability by sector and subsector for 380 metropolitan areas and 50 states.

Entering the Job Market:  Meet the 2020 grads entering the bleakest economy in decades.  Fascinating profiles of how grads are experiencing this period.  

UI Dashboard:  The Century Foundation and New America Foundation have released a UI dashboard tracking claims, delays, and other impacts.  


RESOURCES

Learning Pods:
  • Richmond:  Sabrina Gross, "the PTA president at Barack Obama Elementary, launched a podding effort for Northside schools after Richmond Public Schools voted on July 15 in favor of an online-only fall semester. While working remotely in the spring, Gross struggled to keep her daughter engaged with her online schooling. Eventually, we just kind of fell off,” she said. “Obviously that’s not an option for the fall. … Parents are going to need additional support.”  Parents interested in podding can fill out a survey distributed by the Barack Obama Elementary PTA, and their names will be added to a spreadsheet with potential matches for their pod. From there, parents can pick and choose who they want to group with.
  • Austin:  As parents rush to form pandemic learning pods, some kids are left behind.  "The Austin district would lose about $8,100 for every student who opts for at-home learning without using district resources."  Prices vary to hire teachers as a tutor or a full-time educator, and can range from an hourly rate of $15 to $50 to a weekly rate of $200 per child, according to parents, teachers and social media sites.
  • Some parents want to hire tutors, start mini schools this year. Most can't afford to.  "Kids who are disproportionately low-income are at highest risk for learning losses," said Ariel Kalil, a professor at the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy. "When these gaps in learning open up, absent some really serious and sustained intervention, the kids won’t (catch up). That will result in less academic achievement, lower lifetime earnings and even lower productivity in adulthood."
  • Kansas:  Parents team up to form pandemic pods.
  • One room schoolhouses make a comeback (including a dome tent used at Burning Man)
  • Churches plan to host students in learning pods.

Back To School Spending:
  • Research from PayPal finds that 40% of parents and 35% college students actually plan to spend more on back-to-school shopping this year. First-year college students, especially, plan to spend 39% more ($732) than the average K-12 parent ($444) on back-to-school shopping this year.  63% say they plan to spend more on remote learning furniture and home goods and 59% indicate spending increase on remote learning and tech.
  • The National Retail Federation estimates parents with kids in K-12 will spend an average of $790, up from $697 last year, while families with college going kids are forecast to spend an average of $1,060, up from $977 in 2019. As a result, total back-to-school and college spending is projected to reach $101.6 billion, topping last year's $80.7 billion and crossing the $100 billion mark for the first time."
  • Deloitte projects that $28.1 billion will be spent on back-to-school items this year, roughly flat compared to 2019.  The consultancy estimates that stronger spending on technology will largely offset steep reductions in spending on clothing and traditional back-to-school supplies.
  • The new school shopping, via Axios.
Grant Opportunity:  New $2 million grant opportunity from Schmidt Futures.  The Futures Forum on Learning: Tools Competition invites teachers, students, researchers, technologists, and ed tech leaders to propose a tool, technology, platform, or research project that can accelerate recovery from COVID-19-related learning loss for students between grades K-12, and advance the field of learning engineering.  Projects should address one of the following:
  • Increase the number of students who are reading by 3rd grade
  • Increase the number of students on track in middle-school math
  • Expand the number of students gaining data and computer science skills in high school
  • Driving more students into college through academic and nonacademic supports
  • Another pressing learning goal identified by the team that is related to COVID-19.
Drawing On Lessons From Summer Camps to Reopen Schools:  National Geographic article on the lessons learned from summer camps that could apply to reopening schools. 

Higher Education:  A new modeling study published by researchers at Harvard and Yale Universities concluded that a safe way to bring college students back to campus this fall would be to test them for COVID-19 every two days using "a rapid, inexpensive, and even poorly sensitive" test.  The authors estimated the per-student cost over an 80-day semester of implementing "the preferred screening strategy" -- a test with 70 percent sensitivity every one, two or seven days depending on the rate of transmission -- were $910, $470 or $120 respectively.

Online Tutoring:  Useful overview from Ulrich Boser covering the research around effective tutoring and various providers.

Parents Struggle as Schools Reopen Amid Coronavirus Surge:  Via AP:  "Putting your child on the bus for the first day of school is always a leap of faith for a parent. Now, on top of the usual worries about youngsters adjusting to new teachers and classmates, there’s COVID-19."

Pandemic Notebook: Via The 74:  13 students about COVID-19, their disrupted school year and the disorienting new normal

OpEds: You Made It To August!  Good job team.  Just finished my CrossFit workout and jumping into the week.
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First daily update using MailChimp!  #Fancy  I want to express appreciation to Neena Hendershott and Cameron Cross from Zearn for their help in getting this set up (and to Shalinee Sharma for suggesting it).  Please share your thoughts and feedback on the experience. Some of you asked if you could forward these emails - the answer is absolutely!  This started as a small funder collaborative but has steadily grown over time.   Have a great weekend.  
--John
 
FRIDAY  7/31

FEDERAL

Phase 4:  Republicans and Democrats have made little progress toward a Phase 4 relief deal.  The Senate Republicans have struggled to muster the votes needed just to pass their bill much less get to a compromise deal.  The White House has started negotiating directly with Sen. Schumer and Speaker Pelosi, going so far as to offer dropping liability shield protections.   The White House also offered a short term extension of the $600 expanded UI benefits, but it was rejected.  As a result, expanded UI expires today which should, in theory, create renewed urgency for lawmakers to come to a deal.  Negotiations are set to resume tomorrow morning.  


STATE

Colorado:  The Governor said it’s “reasonably safe” to reopen Colorado’s schools in the coming weeks, as the state health agency released specific steps local educators should take. "Unlike parts of Texas and much of Florida, it’s reasonably safe to open schools. Just as it’s reasonably safe to go to the grocery store, just as it’s reasonably safe to go to work."  Schools should close when five or more cohorts or classrooms report an outbreak within a two-week period; or when 5% or more of unrelated students, teachers and staff have confirmed cases within a two-week period, according to the guidance.

Maine:  Released additional guidance for reopening schools, including SEL and hybrid learning recommendations.  The state also released a color-coded system to help trigger different school actions.

New Jersey:  Large teacher protest today and the unions are threatening a strike.

New York:  Hybrid school reopening plans leave parents scrambling: ‘A lot of people I know are quitting their jobs to be home"

Ohio:   Pennsylvania:  Governor Wolf said he will not be ordering the closure of schools for the fall. 

Utah:  Salt Lake City schools will start the year with all classes online — making it the only district in the state to not have any students returning in person.


ECONOMIC RECOVERY

Austan Goolsbee:  Good interview on COVID and the economic recovery.

Missed Mortgage/Rents: According to the Census Household Pulse survey, 26.5% of households reported they missed last month's rent or mortgage payment (or little confidence in making this month's payment).  This has increased from a low of 22.1% in the survey of June 4th - June 9th.


RESOURCES

Reopening US Schools in the Era of COVID-19: Practical Guidance From Other Nations:  Article published in JAMA outlining practical steps schools could take based on reopening experiences internationally.  

Remote Start: Beginning the New School Year Virtually:  Collection of resources and guides from Charter School Growth Fund.  

The Risk That Students Could Arrive at School With COVID-19:  A group of epidemiologists at the University of Texas at Austin have released a rough gauge of the risk that students and educators could encounter at school in each county in the United States.  The NYT turned it into a visualization as well as a searchable database. 

Trust in Government and Business:  75% of consumers agree that during the COVID-19 pandemic and related shutdowns, "companies were more reliable than the federal government in keeping America running."  Axios/Harris poll.
OpEds:
The Kids Say:  Don't give up on me. 
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