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COVID Brief: New Data Reveals Rapid Rise of XBB.1.5 Variant

A weekly roundup of headlines about how the pandemic is shaping schools and education policy, vetted by AEI Visiting Fellow John Bailey

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This is our weekly briefing on the pandemic, vetted by John Bailey. .

This Week鈥檚 Top Story 

New Data Reveals XBB.1.5 Variant Surge in Recent Weeks 

  • for the week ending Dec. 31. That鈥檚 up about 20% from the week ending Dec. 24.
  • Good of what is known about the variant.
  • Eric Topol: “, especially among seniors, in recent weeks as this variant has been taking hold. Of course, other factors are likely contributing, such as waning of immunity, indoor/holiday gatherings, cold weather, lack of mitigation. But it is noteworthy that New York鈥檚 COVID hospital admission rate is the highest since late January [2022] (and also exceeds the summer 2021 Delta wave, but with some ambiguity as to how hospitalizations were categorized then and now).”
  • shared what we know and don’t know.

The Big Three

Eamonn Fitzmaurice/蜜桃影视

Quarantines, Not School Closures, Led to Devastating Losses in Math and Reading

  • I have a piece up on 蜜桃影视 that explores the academic disruptions caused by COVID quarantines and how few districts had plans for live instruction.  
  • “Quarantine guidance from the CDC required an entire class of students to be sent home for as long as two weeks if they had close contact with a child who tested positive. The result was massive learning disruptions that occurred throughout the school year, even in states where schools were officially reopened.”
  • “A bipartisan poll conducted by Public Opinion Strategies and Impact Research found that on average, children missed five weeks鈥 worth of school in the first half of the academic year, due in part to quarantines.”
  • “Only four of the largest 100 districts promised live instruction for quarantined students, and just 36% of quarantined students reported having live classes with teachers.”  
  • “Even more devastating: A review of data from the Census Bureau鈥檚 Household Pulse Survey from March to June 2022 found that on average, a staggering 16% of students said they had no live contact with teachers over the previous seven days.”
  • “It鈥檚 little wonder then that 7 out of 10 students found quarantine to be disruptive to their learning. And it should not be surprising that so many disrupted school days and so little interaction with teachers would contribute to the academic loss reflected in the NAEP scores.”

Racial Equity Effects of Pandemic Schooling Disruptions in Washington

  • The Washington Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee released a new / / .
  • Washington Legislative Auditor鈥檚 : 鈥淩acial disparities in student assessment scores increased during the COVID-19 pandemic, especially in higher-poverty schools. [The Washington Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction] does not yet have a process to monitor the effectiveness of federally funded interventions to promote learning recovery.鈥
  • “Student assessment scores [for all groups] declined during the pandemic. School poverty level had the greatest association with assessment scores.”
  • The superintendent鈥檚 office 鈥渉as not yet established processes to monitor districts鈥 efforts to address the pandemic’s academic effects or the outcomes of emergency spending.”

In-Person Schooling and Youth Suicide Patterns

  • : “We document three key findings. First, using data from the National Vital Statistics System from 1990-2019, we document the historical association between teen suicides and the school calendar. We show that suicides among 12- to-18-year-olds are highest during months of the school year and lowest during summer months (June through August).”
  • “Second, we show that this seasonal pattern dramatically changed in 2020. Teen suicides plummeted in March 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic began in the U.S., and remained low throughout the summer before rising in fall 2020, when many K-12 schools returned to in-person instruction.”
  • “Third, using county-level variation in school reopenings in fall 2020 and spring 2021 鈥 proxied by anonymized SafeGraph smartphone data on elementary and secondary school foot traffic 鈥 we find that returning from online to in-person schooling was associated with a 12% to 18% increase teen suicides.”
  • “Auxiliary analyses using Google Trends queries and the Youth Risk Behavior Survey suggests that bullying victimization may be an important mechanism.”

Federal Updates

Education Department: Released

  • 鈥淚n FY 2021, roughly 43% of expended funds from subgrants to [local education agencies] were used to meet students鈥 academic, social, emotional and other needs. This represents the largest category of LEA subgrant expenditures.鈥
  • 鈥淥ver 2,700 LEAs expended ESSER funds on mental health supports.鈥
  • 鈥淔or FY 2021, 44% of expended funds from subgrants to LEAs were used for personnel, including salaries and benefits for additional staff and additional staff time to address the impacts of lost instructional time.鈥
  • Related: using the latest Education Department data. 

Federal Spending Package: Congress reached consensus around . Some highlights:

  • Total for Education Department: $79.6 billion (+$3.2 billion). Title I: $18.4 billion (+$850 million). The bill also directs the department to target $87 million within the Education Innovation and Research grant program to support SEL grants and an additional $87 million for STEM. The bill also directs the Institute of Education Sciences to “support a new funding opportunity for quick turnaround, high-reward scalable solutions.”
  • Mental Health: $5.27 billion (+803 million), including $111 million for school-based mental health grants at the Department of Education.
  • The National Science Foundation is in line for $10 billion in funding, the largest dollar increase ever for the agency and the largest percentage increase in two decades.
  • Related: Omnibus Bill Includes Substantial New Funds for Education R&D

COVID-19 Research

The Economic Cost of the Pandemic

  • Learning loss could shave $70,000 off the lifetime earnings of children who were in school during the pandemic.
  • : “If the learning losses aren鈥檛 recovered, K-12 students on average will grow into less educated, lower-skilled and less productive adults and will earn 5.6% less over the course of their lives than students educated just before the pandemic 鈥 the losses could total $28 trillion over the rest of this century.”

COVID鈥檚 Winter Surge is Poised to Exceed Summer Peak: .

  • “The number of people with COVID-19 is about to surpass the figure reached during this summer鈥檚 spike.”
  • “Notably, the number of people hospitalized with COVID 鈥 roughly 40,000 鈥 is still far below the winter waves of 2020-21 and 2021-22 (the wave driven by the original Omicron variant) as well as the Delta wave in summer and fall 2021.”

More Than 1 in 4 Think Someone They Know Died from COVID-19 Vaccines 

  • According to a new .
  • “Seventy-seven percent of adults who have not gotten COVID-19 vaccinations believe it鈥檚 at least somewhat likely that side effects of COVID-19 vaccines have caused a significant number of unexplained deaths. Among those who have gotten the vaccine, just 38% consider unexplained deaths from the vaccine at least somewhat likely.”
  • “46% of whites, 48% of Blacks and 57% of other minorities believe it is at least somewhat likely that side effects of COVID-19 vaccines have caused a significant number of unexplained deaths.”
  • Related: The Inflated Risk of Vaccine-Induced Cardiac Arrest, via : “Damar Hamlin鈥檚 collapse on Monday Night Football calls attention to a medical myth that will not die.”

City & State News

Florida:  

  • “ at Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis鈥檚 request to investigate any wrongdoing with respect to the COVID-19 vaccines.”
  • 鈥淒eSantis鈥檚 petition for a grand jury investigation into COVID-19 vaccines, in which he decries the ongoing vaccine campaign as 鈥榩ropaganda鈥 by the Biden administration, is drawing fierce criticism from health experts,鈥 .

Louisiana: Louisiana鈥檚 education chief from public devices amid concerns about security and the privacy of user data.

Massachusetts: There are nearly for school nurse positions, accounting for more than 10% of all those in the state.

Michigan: with the state to help improve academic outcomes for students, state education officials announced in November 鈥 an increase over the previous year that reflects underfunding, a teacher shortage and the ongoing impact of COVID-19.

New Mexico: Students in Title I schools, including those in tribally controlled areas, with Paper through a nearly $3.3 million investment.

Viewpoints and Resources

: The U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation has launched a , seeking creative thinking for the next iteration of federal and/or state K-12 assessment and accountability policy. This design challenge is a part of the foundation’s ongoing partnership with its .

: Windy Lopez-Afilitto in Ms. Magazine

Learning Loss Is Worse than NAEP Showed. Middle School Math Must Be the Priority: David Wakelyn in 蜜桃影视

…And on a Lighter Note

Dance Your Style:

  • . It’s fun watching the

Happy New Year: “For last year’s words belong to last year’s language, and next year’s words await another voice.” T.S. Eliot

For even more COVID policy and education news, .

Disclosure: John Bailey is an adviser to the Walton Family Foundation, which provides financial support to 蜜桃影视.

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