Biden Blames Math, Reading Losses on the Pandemic—When He Should Blame COVID-19 Restrictions
Virtual learning was a policy choice, and the politicians who supported it are responsible.

On Wednesday, President Biden blamed kids' reading and math losses on the COVID-19 pandemic, and called on school districts to spend American Rescue Plan funds on tutoring programs.
"Due to the pandemic, kids are behind in math and reading," tweeted Biden. "We know how to help bridge this gap. I'm calling on schools to use American Rescue Plan funds to expand tutoring, summer learning, and after school programs and to provide 250,000 more tutors and mentors for our kids."
Due to the pandemic, kids are behind in math and reading. We know how to help bridge this gap.
I'm calling on schools to use American Rescue Plan funds to expand tutoring, summer learning, and afterschool programs and to provide 250,000 more tutors and mentors for our kids.
— President Biden (@POTUS) July 5, 2022
If by "the pandemic," Biden was referring to the disease itself, his comment is misleading. The overwhelming majority of otherwise healthy kids who caught COVID-19 got sick—they didn't get worse at math. The reason that many young people are currently lagging in reading and math is because they languished in a virtual learning environment for months. Working families struggled to make sure their kids logged on to their laptops and kept up with their assignments. Students from challenging backgrounds couldn't engage with the material through a computer screen; others were so depressed from no longer seeing their friends or participating in extracurricular activities that they tuned out of the academic part of school entirely.
When they did get back into the classroom, masks—which can inhibit clear communication—made learning more difficult for some kids, particularly those who have learning disabilities. And some districts kept forcibly masking students, even without much scientific evidence to back up the assertion that cloth masks were tamping down the spread of COVID-19 in schools. In New York City, children under the age of 5 were forced to wear masks in school until June 13. They've been unmasked for less than a month.
Throughout the pandemic, no one languished under more onerous restrictions than children. Even though it was well-established early on that COVID-19 largely spared most healthy young people, state and local governments—at the behest of federal health officials—forced schools to close. In many parts of the country, class instruction was virtual for an entire year. Policy choices created the circumstances that caused kids' reading and math attainment to plummet, and the political actors who supported those choices—Biden, Democrats, and teachers unions—are responsible for them.
Using the American Rescue Plan to pay for tutoring is a backward plan: The public school system has already failed countless kids. Rather than funneling more money into that system and merely hoping that the system will somehow improve itself—even though increased funding for public schools has never produced better reading and math outcomes—why not just give the money to families and let them use it to procure whatever educational opportunity is in their individual child's best interest?
On many other issues, progressives understand that just giving money directly to people is better than making them jump through hoops to qualify for financial assistance with housing, food, medical care, etc. But when it comes to education, many progressives—the president among them—want to keep throwing money at a failing system. Why not fund the students instead?
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
This should be easy to examine on a district by district basis, and then correlate with days of live instruction.
exactly
I actually have made $18k within a calendar month via working easy jobs from a laptop. As I had lost my last business, I was so upset and thank God I searched this simple job (wby-05) achieving this I'm ready to achieve thousand of dollars just from my home. All of you can certainly join this best job and could collect extra money on-line visiting this site.
>>>>>>>>>> http://payout11.tk
If Black and Brown students lost more ground than their white peers, I learned in college that type of thing should be blamed on WHITE SUPREMACY and SYSTEMIC RACISM. The solution, of course, is to vote for Democrats because cities and states they control don't have this problem.
#AntiRacism101
As a gay black man that is GOP proud and about as funny as a liberal meme I couldn't agree more. I too was a member of not one, but two oppressed minorities. I struggled to reconcile my American Socialist leanings, but was drawn to the Republican party by its open acceptance of Trans proud Caitlin Jenner. Man, they looked good in heels. And the big hands, adam's apple and bulge beneath the tight skirt had me questioning my own gender choice. Black. Man. Suddenly that skin felt like a tighty whitey. Little did I know I would soon be voting Trump, dreaming of DeSantis and wishing Adam Schiff would come out of the closet and declare his love of women's clothing already.
If this is White Supremacy I am all in my good friend. Like Diana Ross and the White Supremes, there 'aint no mountain high enough to keep this GOP Proud Black Flaggot down!
Leftists really can't meme.
I can't imagine reading that one last time and STILL wanting to hit "submit"
Another idiot to mute.
You're fucking terrible at this. Simply awful.
As a Poe gay black man I have never been so GOP Proud.
Thank you for the many compliments.
Democrats are so stupid that they could lose an election to a tree full of masterbating howler monkeys.
There's a difference?
Don't insult masterbating howler monkeys!
Is anything sacred anymore?
You lefty piles of shit did this. Every one of you that pushed mask mandates, school closures, and other ridiculous restrictions on kids who we had plenty of data were not necessary. This is on you.
The backlash is coming, and you deserve it.
I anticipate your repartee with Joe "4 bit" Friday on this; he just LOVES him some mandates and telling you what to do.
Joe Asshole seems to have gone missing this week. The world hopes he took our advice to fuck off and die.
So it's blame COVID or Putin for pretty much everything.
Don't forget the oil companies and small businesses.
And the press, too, for not simping for him hard enough.
Hey, Reason: welcome to what we were saying 24 months ago!
Reason writers have started doing their research in the comment section.
the comments section pretty much had the appropriate way to react to COVID, the correct prediction of idiotic govt policies' results, and the economic consequences as well as educational consequences about a couple months in. For sure before 6 months.
It took the MSM and elites an additional 2 years to catch up with a bunch of degenerate grumps on reason's comments. It really is a sad state of affairs. And they still dont completely get it.
If the reason writers took a hint from the comments this might actually resemble a libertarian outfit with better information, but unfortunately its still an outlet that leans left, votes democrat, and only lands on libertarian principles regarding sex work and weed (as these wont enrage the left). These writers are people who vote libertarian when they know their vote doesnt matter, and basically want to be that "edgy" democrat in the leather jacket who has a little bit of a badboy side but at the end of the day, wont upset the balance of power so they can still come to the cocktail parties.
If that was true it wouldn't have taken them two years to figure it out.
Their last donation drive must've been terrible.
Next stop, How Masking our Children during Covid had a Negative Affect on Health
Hello Ali Ackbar - GOP Proud.
How disappointing
Just having a little fun at the real ALI's expense, Nardz. Read it again and apply Poe's law. It is not easy to be that unfunny and cringy at the same time.
>>American Rescue Plan funds to ... provide 250,000 more tutors and mentors for our kids
and arm them like the IRS and EPA!!
Very late to the party, Robby.
Let's recap: the COVID virus made kids dumber, Putin raised gas prices, greedy corporations are ruining the American and global economy, parents are seditious assassins threatening school boards, the Supreme Court ordered all women into breeding stables, all conservatives are out-of-control gun promoters, and there is absolutely nothing going on in the Netherlands.
^this guy propagandas
You forgot let's spend some more 'Covid Funds' to make it better.
You forgot: Republicans stopping the democrats from addressing anything
Lol, all those funds have been spent on anti-racism classes and geneder unicorn books.
Christ, what an asshole.
New study shows wearing masks in schools is like wearing a blindfold at a strip club.
Association between School Mask Mandates and SARS-CoV-2 Student Infections: Evidence from a Natural Experiment of Neighboring K-12 Districts in North Dakota
Our findings contribute to a growing body of literature which suggests school-based mask mandates have limited to no impact on the case rates of COVID-19 among K-12 students.
No way!
Oh hey welcome to May 2020! In five years we might even get an article suggesting that the vaccines aren't all they were promised to be........
I don't know what you heard and thought you were promised about the COVID vaccines, but I see them as working as promised. Measles, polio, smallpox, etc. - those diseases were wiped out, or nearly so, because of the fact that almost everyone that medically could get vaccinated was vaccinated. Polio is only endemic in like five countries in the whole world now, measles is not endemic in the U.S. and breaks out almost entirely among the unvaccinated when someone carrying it from abroad arrives. Smallpox truly was eradicated, though I've seen some reports that the vaccine for it is somewhat effective against Monkeypox. Older people that got the smallpox vaccine might be somewhat protected against it.
Effective vaccines had previously required at least a few years of development, so that we got vaccines at all in a year was truly remarkable. And they would have been even better at reducing the overall number of infections, hospitalizations, and deaths had there been larger numbers of people willing to get them.
Being skeptical of experts is always warranted, but COVID vaccine skepticism in the U.S. was mostly driven by partisan politics, not healthy scientific skepticism. (Though it is also understandable that some Black people were skeptical due to historical racist practices.) These vaccines obviously aren't magic bullets that will end the pandemic by themselves, but they are still well worth it.
Fuck off and die, asshole.
Well, first of all, all the 'experts' said that it stopped transmission. That was the entire basis for mandating the vaccine. This despite the fact that the actual data in the real world showed the vaccine didn't stop transmission. And not 'failed to stop transmission 5% of the time', which would be bad enough, but more like 'maybe perhaps slows transmission a little, we think'.
https://thecountersignal.com/white-house-doctor-says-vaccine-efficacy-claims-were-based-on-hope-not-science/
----------------
"These vaccines obviously aren't magic bullets that will end the pandemic by themselves, but they are still well worth it."
------------
The thing is, we WERE PROMISED that magic bullet. All the 'experts' said so. And even though the actual data has never supported the magic bullet theory, not only does Biden keep mandates in place, many places (like WA) are mandating boosters for government workers.
And the kicker is, the places that didn't go nuts with vaccines aren't overrun with covid death. Just like lockdowns, vaccine uptake has no correlation with outcomes in 2021, and is PERHAPS making things worse in 2022 based on the virus evolving to evade the vaccines -- just like we were saying it would.
A cite for the 'experts' saying it stopped transmission:
https://twitter.com/jessblasser22/status/1540583519369547776
Oh, and one last comment: I love how it's understandable that black people are vaccine hesitant because of history, but none of the rest of the colors are supposed to learn from it.
Suck more establishment Democratic cock, male, female, or other.
You need to catch up on what has been coming out about the trials for the vaccines. And what is actually happening in places with 90% + vaccination and boosters.
Judging by his post, he'll catch up on it in ~18 months, after the Times publishes a hard-hitting expose coincident with a push from the admin to expand the FDA's purview over pharma pricing and research.
I'm not sure what vaccine you got?
Unspoken by Reason is how many of the kids that stayed home did so entirely by choice of the parents. Florida, controlled entirely by the GOP at the state level, insisted on keeping schools open throughout the 2020-2021 school year, but allowed districts various 'hybrid' models of at home instruction in parallel with in-person instruction at school. For instance, many districts, including the one I work in, allowed students to stay at home if they logged into a conference tool to participate in class simultaneously with those there in person. This was all entirely a voluntary choice of the parents. I teach high school science, and probably only 1/3 of my students were attending in person.
I will be the first to say that it was not an effective method of instruction for either group of students. The technology was not reliable (the district's network infrastructure and providers were not set up for that much demand), it had limitations compared to in-person instruction, and my attention was inherently divided between trying to maintain interest and participation between students at home and in class. Non-technical problems existed as well, as attendance was generally poor, the rate of completion of assignments was well below previous years, cheating was rampant, and so on.
Last year did not include that kind of option, but attendance problems persisted and students generally were much less motivated and disciplined than they had been (which was already trending in the wrong direction prior to COVID among the instant-gratification generation). And parents, quite frankly, can be as much the problem as anything Democrats or our unions want.
Many years ago, I saw a cartoon that encapsulates the relationship between schools and some parents perfectly. It had two panels, labeled "then" and "now". Under "then" were two parents holding a report card with F's that were yelling at the kid, who looked fearful and chastened, "Why did you fail?!" Under "now" the parents holding the the report card with F's were yelling at the teacher, "Why did you fail my son?!" While the kid was off to the side smirking, and the teacher looked fearful. A recent anecdote I can pass on is from a fellow teacher that took over from a young teacher that left the profession when she got a job less stressful for the same pay. Now, this guy is hardly some woke SJW looking to boost kids' self esteem. He was a retired Navy Captain, about as 'old-school' in his attitudes as you're likely to see in teaching. He wrote a discipline referral on a student that refused to put her phone away after multiple times being told to do so. Her mother said it was disrespectful for him to be applying the rules in the district's code of conduct, as she wanted her daughter to be able to respond right away if she called or texted her.
This is what we are up against as educators now. Parents that understand the importance of education and know that an essential part of their role is to ensure that their children do what they need to do are the ones that might choose to take advantage of voucher programs like what Florida has. Of course, "school choice" isn't just for the parents. It is also for the private schools, and also for charter schools, though to a lesser extent. Private schools are under no obligation to accept a particular student, voucher or not. Charter schools can require much more strict procedures for student discipline and parent participation than regular public schools can. And not all parents that might want to send their kid to a private or charter school will be able to do so, since those schools will not always have transportation available, have the ability to accommodate a child's special needs, or any number of other issues. Studies on D.C.'s Opportunity Scholarships from some years ago looked at why some parents that were offered scholarships for their children did not end up using them, and many reasons like those were given.
Competition between regular public schools and 'choice' schools is not done on an even playing field, so it is to be expected that regular public schools would struggle under such a competitive model. Of course, some public schools do fine now and would continue to do fine, because parents are already choosing them by buying houses in areas that have high-performing suburban public schools. I often get the impression that these parents are the real target and end-game for politicians that advocate for "school choice". They eventually want taxpayer subsidies for professional, middle class parents that can afford to live in suburban neighborhoods that have decent or better public schools, but that would struggle to afford tuition at the best private schools. They especially would like that to increase the number of kids going to socially conservative Christian schools. That is why they have been pushing court cases that build SCOTUS precedents that will require any voucher programs to also cover religious schools. This has never been about trying to lift up kids growing up in poor, urban neighborhoods. It is hard not to see it as just a less-obviously racist form of the segregation academies phenomenon all over again.
Before you accept anything this steaming pile of lefty shit posts, look here as he justifies murder as a preventative in case someone might do something the asshole doesn't like:
JasonT20
February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
“How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?...”
Eat shit and die, you pathetic excuse for humanity.
I love the bit about "subsidies" for people who can afford suburbia.
The people who pay the higher property taxes in the first place, so they can live in an area with better schools, so their children can get a good education. Who sacrifice some, who probably save less than they could for retirement, who have to work more hours and spend more time ferrying the kids around, all to give those kids a chance at a good education.
All the whining is based on "it's the government's money" and the end result is taking motivated students and active parents and forcing them into shit schools. Not everyone can be at the best school, so everyone has to be at a bad school.
Life's not fair. And where it is fair, your personal choices can make things better or worse for you. But none of that is my fucking problem, if I had kids right now who could choose between normal public schools and literally ANYTHING else, I would never choose the public school. Fuck anyone who wants to give a shittier education to a motivated child (and parents) for the sake of some sort of social equality.
I don't understand how it's not fair that if you want something- in this case, decent education for your kids - you have to actually work for it or do something to get it. That's not unfair. That's life.
People who value education for their kids will do what they need to do to secure it. My kids have always gone to private schools, and it's not easy. It means no fancy vacations, driving a 12 year old Toyota, and very little discretionary spending in order to afford tuition, because my kids' tuition is my most important family expense. Other families at their schools have it easier than me, but that's not "unfair." It's just how it is and it has nothing to do with me.
"Competition between regular public schools and 'choice' schools is not done on an even playing field, so it is to be expected that regular public schools would struggle under such a competitive model."
You mean the unfair advantage that public schools have by extorting the taxpayers through strikes, the crony relationships teacher unions have with federal, state, and local governments, and the monopoly they still have--and fight to protect--in many towns, right? Or just the simple fact that public schools consistently get more funding per pupil, regardless of actual performance, than other schools?
If you expect honesty from that slime ball, you might also expect Joe Asshole to have some intelligence.
What a steaming pile of shit. The logic being used against 'school choice' is the same Orwellian double speak logic used against blacks and women being treated equally for centuries. '...This is what we are up against as educators now...' is the tell. The truth is parents by the millions are saying, '...this is what we are up against as parents trying to educate our children...', fighting educators who seek to retain their vise like grip on education for personal gain. Private schools don't have to accept....so what. Nothing illegal or unconstitutional about public schools doing the same. If Starbucks doesn't want to offer sugar in their coffee, so be it. Doesn't mean a parent has to send their kids to that coffee shop.
Left wingers support for public schools has never been about education. They support public schools in return for votes and donations, which is why so much of the teaching is substandard. That's why they protect it with accusations of racism - to warn people away from reform.
Wonder if Newsom is claiming the devil made him do it.
Couldn't possibly. Newsome is the devil.
Newsom is too stupid to be the devil. But they often dine together and share notes at the French Laundry.
When someone says "COVID" is the reason for something I always correct them and say "the response to COVID". The people responsible need to be accountable.
Yep. Every time some Reason writer claims something is a result of "the pandemic", it gets an immediate correction.
BTW, Newsom is running ads in FL, suggesting Floridians move to CA to enjoy the attentions of a tin-pot-dictator-wannabe. The Chron is claiming he's focusing on the 'long game', rather than simply exhibiting his stupidity.
The man is stupid beyond my imagination.
I always deliberately use the term lockdowns when speaking to people about the effects of the lockdowns. It was a deliberate action that caused the results we are seeing not an issue force beyond humanities control.
All the bad things that have happened over the last few years are the result of how government has responded to supposed crises, rather than the crises themselves.
We had a choice of how to respond to Putin's invasion. If we had chosen to ignore it and gone on with business as usual, energy prices wouldn't have changed much, we wouldn't have food shortages, and inflation would be much lower
We had a choice of how to respond to COVID. We chose lockdowns and massive money printing, and that's what is hurting us.
Let's face it: We're just bloody stupid, period. But lest we forget, we are all victims!!!
Victims of our own stupidity....
Cheers