Current:Home > InvestThe math problem: Kids are still behind. How can schools catch them up?-Angel Dreamer Wealth Society D1 Reviews & Insights
The math problem: Kids are still behind. How can schools catch them up?
View Date:2024-12-24 00:55:22
On a breezy July morning in South Seattle, a dozen elementary-aged students ran math relays behind an elementary school.
One by one, they raced to a table, where they scribbled answers to multiplication questions before sprinting back to high-five their teammate. These students are part of a summer program run by the nonprofit School Connect WA, designed to help them catch up on math and literacy skills lost during the pandemic. There are 25 students in the program, and all of them are one to three grades behind.
One 11-year-old boy couldn’t do two-digit subtraction. Thanks to the program and his mother, who has helped him each night, he’s caught up. Now, he says math is challenging, but he likes it.
Other kids haven’t fared so well.
Across the country, schools are scrambling to catch up students in math as post-pandemic test scores reveal the depth of missing skills. On average, students’ math knowledge is about half a school year behind where it should be, according to education analysts.
Children lost ground on reading tests, too, but the math declines were particularly striking. Experts say virtual learning complicated math instruction, making it tricky for teachers to guide students over a screen or spot weaknesses in problem-solving skills. Plus, parents were more likely to read with their children at home than practice math.
The result: Students’ math skills plummeted across the board, exacerbating racial and socioeconomic inequities in math performance. And students aren’t bouncing back as quickly as educators hoped, supercharging worries about how they will fare in high school and beyond.
___
The Education Reporting Collaborative, a coalition of eight newsrooms, is documenting the math crisis facing schools and highlighting progress. Members of the Collaborative are AL.com, The Associated Press, The Christian Science Monitor, The Dallas Morning News, The Hechinger Report, Idaho Education News, The Post and Courier in South Carolina, and The Seattle Times.
___
Students had been making incremental progress on national math tests since 1990. But over the past year, fourth and eighth grade math scores slipped to the lowest levels in about 20 years, according to data from the National Assessment of Educational Progress, known as the “Nation’s Report Card.”
“It’s a generation’s worth of progress lost,” said Andrew Ho, a professor at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Education.
At Moultrie Middle School in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, Jennifer Matthews has seen the pandemic fallout in her eighth grade classes. Her students have shown indifference to understanding her pre-algebra and Algebra I lessons.
“They don’t allow themselves to process the material. They don’t allow themselves to think, ‘This might take a day to understand or learn,’” she said.
And recently students have been coming to her classes with gaps in their understanding of math concepts. Basic fractions, for instance, continue to stump many of them, she said.
Using federal pandemic relief money, some schools have added tutors or piloted new curriculum approaches in the name of academic recovery. But that money has a looming expiration date: The September 2024 deadline for allocating funds will arrive before many children have caught up.
Like other districts across the country, Jefferson County Schools in Birmingham, Alabama, saw students’ math skills take a nosedive from 2019 to 2021. Leveraging pandemic aid, the district placed math coaches in all of their middle schools.
The coaches help teachers learn new and better ways to teach students. About 1 in 5 public schools in the United States have a math coach, according to federal data. The efforts appear to be paying off: State testing shows math scores have started to inch back up for most of the Jefferson County middle schools.
In Pittsburgh’s school system, which serves a student population that is 53% African American, special education teacher Ebonie Lamb said it’s “emotionally exhausting” to see the inequities between student groups. But she believes those academic gaps can be closed through culturally relevant lessons, and targeting teaching to each student’s skill level.
Lamb said she typically asks students to do a “walk a mile in my shoes” project in which they design shoes and describe their lives. It’s a way she can learn more about them as individuals. Ultimately, those connections help on the academic front. Last year, she and a co-teacher taught math in a small group format that allowed students to master skills at their own pace.
“All students in the class cannot follow the same, scripted curriculum and be on the same problem all the time,” she said.
Adding to the challenge of catching kids up is debate over how math should be taught. Over the years, experts say, the pendulum has swung between procedural learning, such as teaching kids to memorize how to solve problems step-by-step, and conceptual understanding, in which students grasp underlying math relationships.
“Stereotypically, math is that class that people don’t like. ... For so many adults, math was taught just as memorization,” said Kevin Dykema, president of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. “When people start to understand what’s going on, in whatever you’re learning but especially in math, you develop a new appreciation for it.”
Teaching math should not be an either-or situation, said Sarah Powell, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin who researches math instruction. A shift too far in the conceptual direction, she said, risks alienating students who haven’t mastered the foundational skills.
“We actually do have to teach, and it is less sexy and it’s not as interesting,” she said.
In Spring, Texas, parent Aggie Gambino has often found herself searching YouTube for math videos. Giada, one of her twin 10-year-old daughters, has dyslexia and also struggles with math, especially word problems. Gambino says helping her daughter has proved challenging, given instructional approaches that differ from the way she was taught.
She wishes her daughter’s school would send home information on how students are being taught.
“The more parents understand how they’re being taught,” she said, “the better participant they can be in their child’s learning.”
Even at a nationally recognized magnet school, the lingering impact of the pandemic on students’ math skills is apparent. At the Townview School of Science and Engineering in Dallas, the incoming ninth graders in Lance Barasch’s summer camp course needed to relearn the meaning of words like “term” and “coefficient.”
“Then you can go back to what you’re really trying to teach,” he said.
Barasch wasn’t surprised that the teens were missing some skills after their chaotic middle school years.
The hope is that by taking a step back, students can begin to move forward.
___
Claire Bryan of The Seattle Times, Trisha Powell Crain of AL.com, Maura Turcotte of The Post and Courier, and Talia Richman of The Dallas Morning News contributed to this report.
___
The Associated Press education team receives support from the Carnegie Corporation of New York. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (381)
Related
- John Krasinski Revealed as People's Sexiest Man Alive 2024
- Thomas Kingston, son-in-law of Queen Elizabeth II's cousin, dies at 45: 'A great shock'
- Idaho set to execute Thomas Eugene Creech, one of the longest-serving death row inmates in the US
- US asylum restriction aimed at limiting claims has little impact given strained border budget
- Martin Scorsese on the saints, faith in filmmaking and what his next movie might be
- Trump lawyers say he’s prepared to post $100 million bond while appealing staggering fraud penalty
- Actor Buddy Duress Dead at 38
- Community searching for answers after nonbinary teen Nex Benedict dies following fight at school
- Cavaliers' Darius Garland rediscovers joy for basketball under new coach
- Toronto Blue Jays reliever Erik Swanson away from team after 4-year-old son gets hit by car
Ranking
- Sister Wives’ Madison Brush Details Why She Went “No Contact” With Dad Kody Brown
- Israel accused of deliberately starving Gaza civilians as war plans leave Netanyahu increasingly isolated
- Chiefs' Mecole Hardman rips Jets while reflecting on turbulent tenure: 'No standard there'
- Oreo to debut 2 new flavors inspired by mud pie, tiramisu. When will they hit shelves?
- NASCAR Cup Series Championship race 2024: Start time, TV, live stream, odds, lineup
- TIMED spacecraft and Russian satellite avoid collision early Wednesday, NASA confirms
- Women entrepreneurs look to close the gender health care gap with new technology
- Horoscopes Today, February 27, 2024
Recommendation
-
Maine dams face an uncertain future
-
ESPN apologizes for Formula 1 advertisement that drew ire of Indianapolis Motor Speedway
-
Tyler Perry halts $800 million studio expansion after 'mind-blowing' AI demonstration
-
A National Tour Calling for a Reborn and Ramped Up Green New Deal Lands in Pittsburgh
-
To Protect the Ozone Layer and Slow Global Warming, Fertilizers Must Be Deployed More Efficiently, UN Says
-
Supreme Court grapples with whether to uphold ban on bump stocks for firearms
-
'The Price is Right': Is that Randy Travis in the audience of the CBS game show?
-
Supreme Court to hear challenge to bump stock ban in high court’s latest gun case