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K-8 Pandemic Learning Trends: Reading & Math, 2017-2022

K-8 Pandemic Learning Trends

By Sofía Bahena and Camila Morales

This first research brief produced by the E4 Center offers important insights into national learning trends prior to and since pandemic-related learning disruptions began in March 2020. Importantly, this research draws attention to lagging student performance and disparate learning outcomes in school settings with high levels of poverty and high proportions of students of color, where students were already struggling to meet grade level learning expectations prior to 2020.

A bright spot in this research brief is evidence of growth as we move forward from the initial onset the pandemic. The E4 Center looks forward to further exploration into the contexts in which student outcomes are improving, asking why and under what conditions. Answering these questions will be essential to building a path forward in which all students succeed.

Background

The COVID-19 pandemic has had dramatic impacts on school districts across the United States. By mid-March 2020, public schools serving over 50 million students across 48 states had closed their buildings and soon after transitioned to remote learning1Education Week (2020) provides a detailed timeline of the pandemic related disruptions across the U.S.. This shift to virtual schooling—along with pre-existing inequities in technology and internet access, public health concerns, teacher turnover, limited childcare options, and the challenges associated with parents suddenly thrust into the role of teachers themselves—dealt a blow to the learning and social-emotional well-being of youth across the country.

Since the onset of the pandemic, average math and reading scores have declined for K-12 students, with steeper drops in math performance2The Center for Reinventing Public Education (2022) and Betthäuser, B.A., Bach-Mortensen, A.M., & Engzell, P. (2023) provide some of the most recent reviews of the literature.. According to the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), also known as the “Nation’s Report Card,” these drops are the largest recorded since assessments began in 1969.

NAEP Mean Score Difference, 2019 vs. 2022
  Math Reading
  Difference Rough equivalent in learning time Difference Rough equivalent in learning time
4th grade 5 points 15 weeks 3 points 9 weeks
8th grade 8 points 24 weeks 3 points 9 weeks
Points out of a total 500. Source: NAEP

While NAEP is the country’s only nationally representative standardized assessment, similar patterns have emerged at the state and local levels3See, for example, Sass & Goldring (2021)., and in other national data available through curriculum and assessment providers4See, for example, Dorn, E., Hanhock, B., Sarakatsannis, J., & Viruleg, E. (2021); Goldhaber, D., Kane, T.J.,
McEachin, A., & Morton, E. (2022); and Kuhfeld, M., Soland, J., & Lewis, K. (2022).
. Furthermore, reviews of existing research have found that not all students experienced the effects of the pandemic in the same way. For low-income students, Black and Latine5In the interest of including all gender identities in a manner compatible with Spanish language pronunciation, we are using the term “Latine” instead of Latino, Latina, or Latinx. students, and students who were already struggling in school, this time was particularly challenging.

As educators know, the pandemic has only exacerbated existing inequalities.

Citing the CDC, Kuhfeld and her colleagues (2022) highlight that “communities of color disproportionately bore the economic, social, and health consequences of the pandemic” (p. 503). Indeed, these communities had higher rates of illness and mortality from COVID6See, for example, Kuhfeld, M., Soland, J., & Lewis, K. (2022) and Saenz, R. (2020, October 30)..

Educators and experts agree leaders should focus on recovery efforts well past the end of the pandemic, including via sustained investment and coordinated economic, health, and education policies at every level of government. The cumulative effects of these early trends have implications for the later academic experiences and lifetime earnings of our nation’s youth.

Addressing these inequities, and supporting the academic and social-emotional development of all our country’s youth, will first require an accurate and dynamic picture of the state of student learning and growth to inform policy and practice.

In what follows, we examine score trends and gaps using data from the i-Ready spring diagnostic tests of 13.5 million students in grades 1-8.

i-Ready tests are computer-delivered formative assessments administered by Curriculum Associates at participating schools throughout the school year. Unlike high-stakes assessments (like state standardized tests), i-Ready assessments are intended to serve as an iterative measure of student progress that school leaders and teachers can use to inform practice.

In Reading Trends and Math Trends, we use i-Ready data to describe trends in student math and reading scores over time for first through eighth grade students across the United States. In Reading Gaps and Math Gaps we explore gaps in i-Ready scores by schools’ socioeconomic and racial composition.

The data include scores from the 2016-17 school year through the 2021-22 school year and capture snapshots of students’ math and reading growth over an academic year. Our findings align with prior studies and contribute insight into the trends and gaps at each grade level, starting from first grade.

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