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This book features contributions from leading experts who present
peer reviewed research on how the unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic
affected U.S. teachers, students, parents, teaching practices,
enrolments, and institutional innovations, offering the first
empirical findings exploring educational impacts likely to last for
decades. The COVID-19 pandemic presented the greatest crisis in the
history of U.S. schooling, with America’s 50 states, thousands of
school systems, and tens of thousands of private and charter
schools responding in myriad ways. This book brings together peer
reviewed, empirical research on how U.S. schools responded, and on
the educational and health impacts likely to last for decades.
Contributors explore how the U.S. responses differed from those in
other countries, with slower reopening, and both reopening and
modes of instruction varying widely across states and school
sectors. Compared to European countries, U.S. responses to
reopening schools reflected political influences more than health
or educational needs, though this was less true in market-based
private and charter schools. The pandemic was a catalyst for school
choice movements across the U.S. Many parents reacted to school
closings by exploring alternatives to traditional public schools,
including an important and likely permanent innovation, small,
parent-created or “pod” schools. As the papers here detail,
long term student learning loss and health and socioemotional
impacts of COVID-19 closings may well last for decades. The volume
concludes by exploring teacher experiences across different sectors
following the pandemic. COVID-19 and Schools will be a key resource
for academics, researchers, and advanced students of education,
education policy and leadership, educational research, research
methods, economics, sociology and psychology. The chapters included
in this book were originally published as a special issue of
Journal of School Choice.
COVID-19 and the Classroom: How Schools Navigated the Great
Disruption presents social science research that explores how
schools navigated the disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic
from March 2020 through the 2020-21 school year. This book also
serves as a history book, documenting what this period was like for
those involved in the enterprise of educating children. The book is
divided into three sections, allowing for an in-depth exploration
of the pandemic's impact. The first section examines how teachers,
parents, and school leaders experienced the pandemic, including
what this looked like when schools first closed for in-person
instruction. Part two explores how schools reopened, both in the
United States and abroad, and discusses the trade-offs associated
with these decisions. This section also explored how private
schools fared and the rise of "pandemic pods". The book concludes
with a look at how a range of teacher preparation programs
continued their work in uncertain times. This volume represents one
of the first to share scholarship on how schools negotiated the
COVID-19 crisis.
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