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So now we know: Pandemic-related restrictions were devastating to the project of educating our kids. The Education Department dropped the news recently that America's experiment with remote learning has reduced young children's standardized test scores to levels not seen in two decades. Although performance fell in every demographic group, the losses were greatest among minorities and the poor.
The announcement has been greeted with a great and astonished wringing of hands, but no one should be surprised. Parents who opposed school closings knew what was coming. In her thoughtful new book "The Stolen Year," Anya Kamenetz of NPR puts the point this way: "The danger that children would be harmed by prolonged school closures in 2020 was clear from the beginning."
Exactly. Harm not only to learning but to social development and mental health. But as the rationale for the shutdown evolved from "two weeks to slow the spread" to a series of unreachable goals, those of us who raised questions about this strategy — including by pointing out that the worst-off children would suffer most — found our email inboxes inundated with angry missives from readers who accused us of ignoring the science.
Yet the "science" was unclear from the start. In 2013, for instance, the British Medical Journal published a review of more than 2,500 studies of the effect of school closing on the spread of the flu. The authors' conclusion: "School closures appear to have the potential to reduce influenza transmission, but the heterogeneity in the data available means that the optimum strategy (e.g., the ideal length and timing of closure) remains unclear."
A 2009 article in Health Affairs was frank about the limits of expert knowledge: "In the contemporary policy arena, agreement is lacking on whether school closure would do more harm than good to the overall population and whether the repercussions would outweigh possible benefits for children and surrounding adult communities."
True, during the 1918 flu pandemic, early closures of schools helped reduce the rate of spread. But those shutdowns typically lasted two to eight weeks. (Late closures had little or no effect.)