Does It Hurt Children to Measure Pandemic Learning Loss?
Research shows many young children have fallen behind in reading and math. But some educators are worried about stigmatizing an entire generation.
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Research shows many young children have fallen behind in reading and math. But some educators are worried about stigmatizing an entire generation.
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Some families have come to prefer stand-alone virtual schools and districts are rushing to accommodate them — though questions about remote learning persist.
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Students are joining remote classes from outside the country. In one New Jersey school district, computers were traced to 24 countries on a day last month.
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The federal government’s new guidance for reopening classrooms does not require teachers to be vaccinated first.
By Dana Goldstein and
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Some examples of how the world of education has responded to the pandemic.
By Alina Tugend, Phyllis W. Jordan and
The same spirit of innovation that made it possible to track storms has helped a Tennessee county prepare for online learning and a return to classrooms.
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We asked readers across the country how they are tackling these new challenges. Here is what they said.
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Unhappy with remote learning, parents are seeking alternatives, touching off “the largest educational innovation experiment” in history.
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Longtime home-schoolers offer advice on what to do, and what not to do.
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