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Grundy Reporter

Thursday, November 21, 2024

How did COVID impact student grades across Grundy County between 2019 and 2021?

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The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic is being seen in how proficient students are or aren’t in the subjects they are taught in school.

In school districts reported on by Grundy Reporter, passing grades in English and math studies fell across the board. Results for the three largest districts in the Grundy Reporter coverage area that saw decreases are below, with further details about each school district found in the table below.

In Minooka Community Consolidated School District 201, the results fell the furthest among students studying English. In 2019, 61.3 percent of students failed English. The latest district results showed 70.6 percent of Minooka Community Consolidated School District 201 students failed English in 2021.

Students in Coal City Community Unit School District 1 fared the worst in English, with the number of students who failed rising from 38.8 percent in 2019 to 47 percent in 2021.

Morris School District 54 saw failing rates rise the most in English, from 66.8 percent in 2019 to 76.3 percent in 2021.

Illinois students are rated on a proficiency scale, rather than a zero to 100 system. Students who did not meet, partially met, or approached their proficiency goals are considered to have failed.

The COVID-19 had “devastating” impacts on student learning, according to a report from the Brookings Institute.

“These numbers are alarming and potentially demoralizing, especially given the heroic efforts of students to learn and educators to teach in incredibly trying times,” the report said. “There is much work to be done, and the challenges for students, educators, and parents are considerable.”

A report from Illinois Policy found while all students were affected by the pandemic, low-income and minority students saw the biggest losses in their proficiency scores.

“Among low-income high school juniors in 2021, under 16 percent scored at proficiency level in reading and fewer than 13 percent were proficient in math. This represents a nearly 15 percent and 25 percent overall proficiency decline since 2019 in each subject. Comparatively, proficiency scores in reading and math for higher-income juniors dropped around 11 percent and 16 percent, respectively.

“By the end of the 2021 school year, higher-income juniors were almost three times more likely to be proficient than low-income students.”

There are many lingering effects of students learning less due to disruptions caused by COVID-19. A McKinsey report found K-12 students were “on average five months behind in mathematics and four months behind in reading by the end of school year.”

The switch to remote learning, where students would attend classes virtually using their laptops instead of being in the classroom, was often pinpointed in reports as the biggest reason for diminishing student proficiency.

Classrooms across the U.S. moved to remote learning when the pandemic began in early 2020. However, an Inside Higher Ed investigation found it was never designed to be the long-term solution it became.

“Students talked a lot about really missing being in person with their classmates…and having those spontaneous, organic conversations and relationships,” Rayane Alamuddin of Ithaka S+R consulting said. “They miss the relationships they make in school because not only does it make them excited about learning and motivate them to stay engaged in school, but they also actually learn a lot more.”

Many school districts have returned to in-class learning, though still with some COVID-19 precautions in place.

Failing Rates in Grundy County School Districts
District2019 Math Failing Rates2021 Math Failing Rates2019 English Failing Rates2021 English Failing Rates
Braceville School District 7572.9%89%62.7%96.8%
Coal City Community Unit School District 151.8%51.6%38.8%47%
Gardner Community Consolidated School District 72C63.3%67.3%60%80.6%
Mazon-Verona-Kinsman Elementary School District 2C68%78.4%60%78.5%
Minooka Community Consolidated School District 20170.2%74.6%61.3%70.6%
Morris School District 5478.1%81.2%66.8%76.3%
Nettle Creek Community Consolidated School District 24C51.7%67.2%32.8%60.7%
Saratoga Community Consolidated School District 60C48.9%51.3%34.9%45.5%
South Wilmington Community Consolidated School District 7456.5%72.4%53.3%74.1%

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