Survey Says…
Only 8% of parents felt like their kids were progressing while schools were closed this spring, and 49% reported regression.
39% of families said that they felt they didn't have enough time to really do distance learning, the way it was supposed to be, or they hoped it would be done, and there was a lot of guilt about
it.
69% of parents said their districts were delivering some kind of special education services.
Of that 69%, many people wrote in that the services were very minimal. They were far less than what was in the IEP.
Many schools just sent home paper packets that parents were to implement, and that was what constituted special education. For others, their child's special education services only consisted of weekly check-ins with the
teacher.
Diane Willcutts, an education advocate in Connecticut, wrote a survey and with the assistance of Pete Wright, distributed it to parents to obtain some data on what distance learning looked like in April
2020.
Over 3,200 parents responded from 49 states and the District of Columbia. To her surprise, families wrote over 10,000 comments on the 11 question survey!
Most reports from families stated that COVID-19 distance learning was a bit chaotic and unpredictable. Only 38% of parents reported that their students got any kind of synchronous instruction, real-time instruction with a
teacher.
You can catch the replay here OR listen to the
podcast
version of this show here.