In 2020, students left schools nationwide in droves. A project between Stanford University, Big Local News, and the Associated Press (AP) worked together to figure out what happened to them.
. Locally collected data shows that mostly Black and low-income students left the New York City public school system in the years since the COVID-19 pandemic.
The data found that New York State had about 60,182 missing students ages 5 to 17, although the project posits that numbers could be much higher. The numbers get more granular when homing in on New York City, as do the reasons that certain groups of students seemingly fled the school system.
“Every year since 2016, we have seen a decline in district enrollment, but the decline appears to be reducing as we come out of the pandemic and establish efforts to increase enrollment. Over the last 15 years in New York City, we’ve also seen a falling birth rate, which has contributed to a drop in enrollment,” said the DOE.
“There’s a story that people tell when Black and brown kids leave the system that can be very different than the story folks will tell if white kids leave the system,” said Capers. “White students leave and they start their own pods, and that’s seen as a natural evolution of a failing system, versus Black and brown kids leave and go back to their home countries or to the South. In reality, people are just trying to take care of themselves.
“We didn’t see the dramatic decrease in enrollment we were expecting and then add on the buses of migrant children that were coming to our schools—about 12,000,” said Salas-Ramirez.
Brasil Últimas Notícias, Brasil Manchetes
Similar News:Você também pode ler notícias semelhantes a esta que coletamos de outras fontes de notícias.
Data: Majority of Migrants in NYC Still in Shelters After Arriving on BusesThe majority of border crossers and illegal aliens in New York City remain in homeless shelters after initially arriving on buses, primarily from Texas.
Consulte Mais informação »
Black Lives Matter rally held outside of NYC Department of Education headquarters | amNewYorkStudents, parents, and educators held a rally last week for the city's Black students on the steps of the NYC Department of Education's headquarters.
Consulte Mais informação »
NYC teachers who refused COVID vaccine slapped with ‘scarlet letter’ in personnel files: lawyer“Loosely speaking, it is like a scarlet letter,” lawyer John Bursch told The Post on Tuesday.
Consulte Mais informação »
A Collective Family Photo AlbumVisual artist and archivist Renata Cherlise founded blackarchivesco in 2015 to honor the Black past by making it accessible. Her first book project does just that. naomi_elias spoke to her about the book and its visual language
Consulte Mais informação »
'You're wrong to mess with Black history': Sharpton, Black leaders rally against DeSantisState Rep. Dianne Hart remembers having to go to a separate water fountain as a child, and she should be able to talk about it regardless if it makes someone feel uncomfortable. 'What are we afraid of? Are we afraid of just telling the truth?'
Consulte Mais informação »