练习 | 研究表明学生学业水平回升

练习 | 研究表明学生学业水平回升

5.5分钟 1353 131wpm

Study: Students Returning to Levels Before the COVID-19 Pandemic

Loading the player...
研究表明学生学业水平回升

刘立军 供稿


TRANSCRIPT

New research shows American students made academic progress this past school year compared to a year earlier. During the 2020 to 2021 school year, COVID-19 restrictions were still in effect in many places in the United States. Student gains in reading and math were larger than the previous school year and similar to student development before the COVID-19 pandemic.

The research comes from NWEA, or the Northwest Evaluation Association, a nonprofit educational research group that issues standardized tests. The NWEA said the gains were observed across income levels. The progress partly made up for lost learning and lack of teaching that resulted from the pandemic, researchers found. However, students in poor schools fell further behind. It is likely they will need more time than higher-income students to make a full recovery.

The study suggested that a full academic recovery will likely continue longer than federal COVID-19 aid money remains available. If recovery happens at the same speed it did in the 2021 to 2022 school year, a full recovery would go beyond the 2024 limit for schools to spend their federal aid, the study said.

The test results are a sign of hope for academic recovery from COVID-19. But continued effort and spending on education remains very important. It could be difficult to see continued improvements with such a long recovery, said Karyn Lewis. She is the director of the Center for School and Student Progress at NWEA. She helped write the study.

The study used data from more than 8 million students. The students had taken the MAP Growth tests in reading and math during the three school years of COVID-19 restrictions. Their results were then compared with data from three years before the pandemic.

Lewis said in a statement that the improvements "are especially heartening during another challenging school year of more variants, staff shortages, and other problems. "

For the average elementary school student, researchers predicted that it would take three years to return to pre-pandemic performance levels. For older students, recovery could take much longer. The amount of time could be different depending on the grade level and social details of students. But researchers found most students will need more than the two years where increased federal aid money is available.

Lewis told the publication Education Week: "Once the federal recovery funds are gone , I'm seeing just continuing gaps widening..."

She said differences, or gaps, would be especially large for what she called "historically marginalized student groups" who struggled during the pandemic.

Lindsay Dworkin is the vice president of policy and communications at NWEA. She said the most successful way to improve student success was increased instructional time. That included more class time, more one-on-one instruction, or high-quality summer classes. But those measures can be costly and complex. School systems may be unwilling to spend the money on them when aid money must be used very soon.

"The funding expires in such a short amount of time that districts are really struggling with, 'What can I do that will be big and impactful and I only need to do for two years?'" Dworkin told The Associated Press. "I think if they knew that there would be more federal money coming and that it would be sustained, that would make all the difference..."

The NWEA studied national data for its report. But Dworkin said understanding each local school system was necessary to understanding how to best support schoolchildren. In addition to differences across student groups, districts that share similar qualities, like race and poverty levels, still showed large differences in student results.

"If you are a district leader, there's just no national story that is going to tell you enough about your district context, without the hard work of digging into the data and understanding what it says," Dworkin said.


VOCABULARY

1. go beyond the limit: 超过限度
2. expire v. (of a document, an agreement, etc. 文件、协议等) to be no longer valid because the period of time for which it could be used has ended (因到期而)失效,终止;到期


QUESTIONS

Read the statements. Then listen to the news and decide whether the statements are true (T) or false (F). Then correct the false statements. 

1. Student gains in reading and science were larger than the previous school year and similar to student development before the COVID-19 pandemic.
2. The NWEA is a nonprofit educational research group that issues standardized tests.
3. The NWEA said the gains were observed across test score levels. 
4. The study suggested that a full academic recovery will likely continue no longer than federal COVID-19 aid money remains available. 
5. Karyn Lewis is the director of the Center for School and Student Progress at NWEA. 
6. The study used data from more than 18 million students. 
7. The students had taken the MAP Growth test in reading and science during the three school years of COVID-19 restrictions. 
8. For the average elementary school student, researchers predicted that it would take more than three years to return to pre-pandemic performance levels. 
9. Lindsay Dworkin is the president of policy and communications at NWEA. 
10. According to Lindsay Dworkin, the most successful way to improve student success was to increase instructional time. 


KEY 

Read the statements. Then listen to the news and decide whether the statements are true (T) or false (F). Then correct the false statements.

(F) 1. Student gains in reading and science were larger than the previous school year and similar to student development before the COVID-19 pandemic.(正确表达)Student gains in reading and math were larger than the previous school year and similar to student development before the COVID-19 pandemic.
(T) 2. The NWEA is a nonprofit educational research group that issues standardized tests.
(F) 3. The NWEA said the gains were observed across test score levels. (正确表达) The NWEA said the gains were observed across income levels. 
(F) 4. The study suggested that a full academic recovery will likely continue no longer than federal COVID-19 aid money remains available.(正确表达)The study suggested that a full academic recovery will likely continue longer than federal COVID-19 aid money remains available. 
(T) 5. Karyn Lewis is the director of the Center for School and Student Progress at NWEA. 
(F) 6. The study used data from more than 18 million students.(正确表达)The study used data from more than 8 million students. 
(F) 7. The students had taken the MAP Growth test in reading and science during the three school years of COVID-19 restrictions.(正确表达)The students had taken the MAP Growth test in reading and math during the three school years of COVID-19 restrictions. 
(F) 8. For the average elementary school student, researchers predicted that it would take more than three years to return to pre-pandemic performance levels. (正确表达)For the average elementary school student, researchers predicted that it would take three years to return to pre-pandemic performance levels. 
(F) 9. Lindsay Dworkin is the president of policy and communications at NWEA.(正确表达)Lindsay Dworkin is the vice president of policy and communications at NWEA. 
(T) 10. According to Lindsay Dworkin, the most successful way to improve student success was to increase instructional time.

(封面图片来源于摄图网,版权归摄图网所有)
  • 时长:5.5分钟
  • 语速:131wpm
  • 来源:刘立军 2022-08-30