1. Urban Classification, Not COVID-19 Community Rates, Was Associated With Modes of Learning in US K-12 Schools?
- Author
-
Goldman, Jennifer L., Schuster, Jennifer E., Maier, Vanessa F., Anand, Rohit, Hill, Elizabeth E., Butteris, Sabrina M., DeMuri, Gregory P., Omidfarf, Samantha A., Brookhart, M. Alan, Pak, Joyce, Benjamin Jr, Daniel K., and Zimmerman, Kanecia O.
- Subjects
- *
TEACHING methods , *EVALUATION of teaching , *SCHOOLS , *ONLINE education , *HIGH schools , *COVID-19 , *MIDDLE schools , *POPULATION geography , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *LEARNING strategies , *DECISION making , *METROPOLITAN areas , *ELEMENTARY schools , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To identify factors associated with the decision to provide in-person, hybrid, and remote learning in kindergarten through 12th grade school districts during the 2020-2021 school year. METHODS: We performed a retrospective study evaluating school district mode of learning and community coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) incidence and percentage positivity rates at 3 time points during the pandemic: (1) September 15, 2020 (the beginning of the school year, before Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance); (2) November 15, 2020 (midsemester after the release of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance and an increase of COVID-19 cases); and (3) January 15, 2021 (start of the second semester and peak COVID-19 rates). Five states were included in the analysis: Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio, andWisconsin. The primary outcome was mode of learning in elementary, middle, and high schools during 3 time points. The measures included community COVID-19 incidence and percentage positivity rates, school and student demographics, and county size classification of school location. RESULTS: No relationship between mode of learning and community COVID-19 rates was observed. County urban classification of school location was associated with mode of learning with school districts in nonmetropolitan and small metropolitan counties more likely to be in-person. CONCLUSIONS: Community COVID-19 rates did not appear to influence the decision of when to provide in-person learning. Further understanding of factors driving the decisions to bring children back into the classroom are needed. Standardizing policies on how schools apply national guidance to local decision-making may decrease disparities in emergent crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF