New Analysis Finds Lasting Impact for Students Affected by COVID School Lockdowns
According to a new report, the average eighth-grader needs over nine months of extra school time to catch up with pre-COVID achievement levels.

Over four years after the start of mass school lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic, many children are still feeling the educational effects. According to a new report from the testing nonprofit Northwest Evaluation Association (NWEA), student test score growth is still failing to rebound to pre-COVID levels, and some children would need as much as nine months of extra schooling to catch up.
"Our findings make it clear that the road to recovery from the pandemic's impact on student achievement is far from over," reads an NWEA research brief released this week. "The effects continue to reverberate, even for the youngest students entering the education system years after the initial onset of the pandemic. At the end of 2021–22, we optimistically concluded that the worst was behind us and that recovery had begun. Unfortunately, data from the past two school years no longer support this conclusion."
NWEA researchers studied the scores of over 7.7 million public school students in grades 3–8 who took the nonprofit's reading and math assessments since the start of the pandemic. The NWEA found that test score gains continued to fall short of prepandemic trends for all but the youngest students during the 2023–24 school year.
These score gaps mean that the average eighth-grader would need over nine extra months of schooling to catch up with pre-COVID achievement levels. The least affected students—third-graders, most of whom would not even have been enrolled in school at the start of the pandemic—would need 2.2 months and 1.3 months of extra schooling to catch up in reading and math respectively.
"At the end of the 2023–24 school year, across all grade levels, the average student will require the equivalent of 4.8 months of additional schooling to catch up to pre-COVID levels in reading and 4.3 months in math," the report reads. "Prepandemic rates of learning vary across grades and subjects. Younger students tend to make larger gains per year compared to older students, and math gains tend to be slightly larger than reading gains."
The report indicates that recovery is unlikely to be so easy and that many students are likely to continue struggling for the foreseeable future. While it will be years before the full educational impact of the COVID-19 pandemic is known, it's hard not to see how school lockdowns caused long-term—or permanent—damage to millions of students.
"Accepting a new normal of lower achievement and widened inequities is not an option," the report reads. "Instead, we must remain committed to using data-driven strategies to understand and address the specific impacts on our students, ensuring they receive the necessary supports to thrive."
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Once again, Reason and The Science™ are three years behind The Commentariat.
In addition to effects on scholastic performance, we can be sure that social cognition, language acquisition, and emotional development in the younger children during COVID fascism has been impaired, and probably more permanently than scholastic performance. Being deprived of human faces, human touch, and interaction with the environment must have been damaging.
Yeah thanks for that. We could argue about whether these kids are 4.3 or 4.6 months behind some standard concocted by some academic somewhere. But the damage done cannot possibly be quantified or overstated. These motherfuckers perpetrated a crime against humanity for political gain while Reason told us we just need more testing. And then they bitch about the MC taking over their LP clownshow and endorse an asshole wearing a rainbow mask. Never forgive and never forget.
The whole lockdown was nonsense right from the start, and all previous Science™ knew that. My theory is that the establishment hated Trump so much that governors and mayors, who were mostly immune to Federal oversight, latched on to lockdowns as a means of thumbing their noses at Trump.
The idea that you could shut down entire swaths of the economy and expect the rest to continue functioning perfectly normally was bizarre, like thinking a bear could hibernate just three toes, an elbow, and an organ or two, while the rest of the body just kept working fine; or stopping one piston in an engine while the others kept everything going.
Elitists are unaware that the jobs of the The Deplorables are actually necessary.
Their ivory tower ignorance is appalling. That they don't care is worse. That they are proud of not caring is a crime against humanity.
How can you tell if you're talking to an idiot?
He has the tile "Ph.D" after his name.
Not to worry. Plenty of illegals to staff Koch Industries.
What?
Kids not learning because they were out of the public school system during the fake COVID crisis?
Newsflash: Kids weren't learning anything in the public school system before and after the fake COVID crisis.
Wasn't it teachers unions, big D supporters, the ones demanding school remain shut? Yet a D candidate for prez is touting how quickly and efficiently the shutdowns were ended.
According to a new report, the average eighth-grader needs over nine months of extra school time to catch up with pre-COVID achievement levels.
OK. So which states are figuring out how to make that happen.
Mandatory 13th grade?
That'll do it, boost their reading proficiency all the way to 5th grade level.
Honestly, that has been the thing since long before covid. The percentage of California State system students needing remedial math or English in the 20teens was significant. Like a third needing one or the other.
You get out of school what you put into it. I've always believed that. But the fact that you have a high school diploma means exactly nothing when it comes to gauging whether you have any actual academic achievement.
An overlong summer break already results in a hefty and well known 'summer learning loss' each year. That long predates COVID. What should be happening is that the addition of COVID just raises the attention to fix the problem already. I'm not sure that's what is happening
Wait, so is this saying being a student during those periods caused their learning to regress by that much, meaning it was worse than not being a student at all? How is that possible? I mean, I can understand their not learning, but not unlearning.
I mean, I can understand their not learning, but not unlearning.
Really? REALLY? I our modern era... on the specific topic of discussion... you can't possibly imagine people, especially children who may've only had a burgeoning understanding to begin with, unlearning something they previously knew like the back of their hand?
We shut down the economy for fear of Grandma getting the vapors. The whole thing was regressive beyond the parody of 50 yrs. old Monty Python sketches.
okay, and what do we do about this ? Nothing.
It's way back in the queue of education horrors. Biden ruined education for thousands of FAFSA-funding victims. and the numbers are falling anyway
How does that translate into enrollment figures? During that four-year span, colleges will lose approximately 576,000 students.
where I teach, 3 problems underlie the other problems
1) Government is all over higher ed like flies on a picnic PB&J ...paperwork, extra expense, harassment, etc
2) Kids do not know how to read, to write , or to do 'rithmetic'
3) The odd fact: Most kids and most adults do not know the basics of their founding, government, rights , or Constitution -- and that might be worst of all
U.S. News and World Report
Most Americans Would Fail U.S. Citizenship Test
2 of 3 Americans Wouldn’t Pass U.S. Citizenship Test
A survey found that people aged 65 and older were more likely to pass the test than those aged 45 and younger.