Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
School shutdowns hurt struggling students, girls the worst: Study
School shutdowns hurt struggling students, girls the worst: Study
Sep 12, 2025 11:28 PM

In-person school closures due to COVID-19 lockdowns widened the gap between the rich and poor, a new study conducted by Oxford University has found. While young people of all demographic groups fell behind during the period of remote learning, those from the least educated homes were the hardest hit.

Researchers studied elementary students from age 8 to 11 in the Netherlands, because they found the country best suited to endure the pandemic. Dutch schools test students twice a year, and 2020 tests fell just before and after the 8-week suspension of in-person education. The nation also has the world’s highest level of broadband penetration, and its schools distributed electronic devices to families that lacked them.

“[O]ur results reveal a learning loss … equivalent to one-fifth of a school year, the same period that schools remained closed,” the researchers find. That is, students learned nothing during the eight-week break. Their education held in stasis for the duration of remote learning.

Like most things in life, the well-off endured the hardship better. The children’s “learning loss was particularly pronounced for students from disadvantaged homes, confirming the fears held by many that school closures would cause socioeconomic gaps to widen,” the Oxford report states.

Levels of learning loss were “up to 60% larger among students from less-educated homes, confirming worries about the uneven toll of the pandemic on children and families.”

The policy put those from deprived families even further behind. People with the highest educational attainment earn on average 47% more e than those with an upper secondary education, according to the OECD. That should concern any nation so devoted to eradicating e inequality.

Worse yet, COVID-19 lockdowns placed poorer families under additional pressure. “Concurrent effects on the economy” caused by closing the economy “make parents less equipped to provide support, as they struggle with economic uncertainty or demands of working from home,” the study says. Parents struggling to survive cannot tutor their children.

Researchers also discovered, although differences between the sexes were slight, girls sustained modestly greater learning loss than boys. Women in the Netherlands earn 14.6% less than men, albeit not always due to differences in qualification levels.

Socioeconomic setbacks were likely worse in other nations. Although the study restricts itself to the Netherlands, Oxford researchers believe “losses [were] even larger in countries with weaker infrastructure or longer school closures.”

Many school districts in the U.S. have been on hiatus a year or longer, often at the urging of the teachers’ union leadership.

The Oxford study’s conclusions confirm similar findings in the United States. The nation’s largest teachers’ union, the National Education Association, joined with the National PTA for a survey of students’ experiences last year. It found:

A 58 percent majority of students say they were doing well academically before the virus; only 32 percent believe they are doing well currently. Younger students and students whose parents did not attend college are the most likely to report an academic decline.

The NEA shrugged off its own findings, saying, “students are extremely resilient.”

The union’s indifference grates all the more, because multiple studies have found the two leading predictors of whether a school district forbids in-person classroom education are the district’s anti-Trump sentiment and the power of teachers’ unions “The number of COVID-19 cases in a munity bore no relationship to the decision to go with virtual education,” wrote Will Flanders of the Wisconsin Institute For Law & Liberty.Instead, closure decisions are best predicted by the level of “partisanship and union presence.” A total of six studies to date have duplicated his conclusions, including:

DeAngelis & Makridis(2020);Hartney & Finger(2020);Flanders(2020);Harris, et al.(2021);Grossman, et al.(2021); andMarianno, et. al. (2021)

The last of these revealed that school districts that furnished teachers’ unions with generous contracts “were less likely to open for in-person instruction at the start of the fall semester, were less likely to ever open during fall semester for in-person instruction, and spent more weeks in remote learning.”

The first wave of students for in-school teaching, from preschool through second grade, just trickled into the Los Angeles United School District on Monday. Its union demanded single-payer healthcare, shutting peting charter schools before teachers return to the classroom. Others insisted school boards adopt vague-sounding policies aimed bat “systemic racism.”

Even when union demands are met, labor organizers sometimes renege on their promise to e children inside the school’s doors. The Cleveland Teachers Union mandated that all teachers be vaccinated before they would go back to school. Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, a Republican, expedited the vaccine distribution to teachers – only to have them vote against returning after all. “When you go and have the vast majority of people go get the vaccine and then not hold up your end of the deal, that’s where our administration takes issue,” said Lt. Gov. Jon Husted. “We skipped a lot of people. They took vaccines that could have gone to other, more vulnerable people.” After significant backlash, union leaders relented a week later.

Children’s educational loss does not just harm their future earnings; denying them the right to develop their full potential costs the church, as well. Abraham Kuyper said, “God’s honor requires the human spirit to probe the plexity of what has been created, in order to discover God’s majesty and wisdom and to express those in human thoughts and language.” This requires Christians to cultivate all the arts of learning – a thought that predates Kuyper by at least 15 centuries. One of the greatest fathers of the Eastern Orthodox Church, St. Gregory of Nyssa, wrote in the Life of Moses that the Bible:

mands those participating through virtue in the free life also to equip themselves with the wealth of pagan learning by which foreigners to the faith beautify themselves. Our guide in mands someone … to receive such things as moral and natural philosophy, geometry, astronomy, dialectic, and whatever else is sought by those outside the Church, since these things will be useful when in time the divine sanctuary of mystery must be beautified with the riches of reason.

Anything that deprives children of these goods impoverishes the church and, to the degree that education is denied, vandalizes the church when she finds her treasury devoid of the riches of reason.

More on this topic:

Why are schools closed? Unions and partisanship, study finds

Your child’s misery is a price the NEA is willing to pay

The forgotten child: Pandemic policies are leaving kids behind

Chicago’s teacher standoff shows the injustice of public-sector unions

13,000 children are being denied an education over a funding fight

‘Education Reimagined’: West Virginia’s quest for school choice

As children thrive at charter schools, progressives threaten their future

Study reveals exactly how teachers’ unions lock children out of schools

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on 1 John 3:16-21   (Read 1 John 3:16-21)   Here is the condescension, the miracle, the mystery of Divine love, that God would redeem the church with his own blood. Surely we should love those whom God has loved, and so loved. The Holy Spirit, grieved at selfishness, will leave the selfish heart without comfort, and...
Verse of the Day
  Acts 4:12 In-Context   10 then know this, you and all the people of Israel: It is by the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom you crucified but whom God raised from the dead, that this man stands before you healed.   11 Jesus is 'the stone you builders rejected, which has become the cornerstone.'Psalm 118:22   12 Salvation is found...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Genesis 50:15-21   (Read Genesis 50:15-21)   Various motives might cause the sons of Jacob to continue in Egypt, notwithstanding the prophetic vision Abraham had of their bondage there. Judging of Joseph from the general temper of human nature, they thought he would now avenge himself on those who hated and injured him without cause. Not...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Complete Concise   Chapter Contents   The apostle admires the love of God in making believers his children. (1,2) The purifying influence of the hope of seeing Christ, and the danger of pretending to this, and living in sin. (3-10) Love to the brethren is the character of real Christians. (11-15) That love described by its actings. (16-21)...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Hebrews 12:12-17   (Read Hebrews 12:12-17)   A burden of affliction is apt to make the Christian's hands hang down, and his knees grow feeble, to dispirit him and discourage him; but against this he must strive, that he may better run his spiritual race and course. Faith and patience enable believers to follow peace and...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Proverbs 11:9   (Read Proverbs 11:9)   Hypocrites delude men into error and sin by artful objections against the truths of God's word.   Proverbs 11:9 In-Context   7 Hopes placed in mortals die with them; all the promise ofTwo Hebrew manuscripts; most Hebrew manuscripts, Vulgate, Syriac and Targum When the wicked die, their hope perishes; / all...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Jeremiah 17:5-11   (Read Jeremiah 17:5-11)   He who puts confidence in man, shall be like the heath in a desert, a naked tree, a sorry shrub, the product of barren ground, useless and worthless. Those who trust to their own righteousness and strength, and think they can do without Christ, make flesh their arm, and...
Verse of the Day
  Matthew 7:24-25 In-Context   22 Many will say to me on that day, 'Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons and in your name perform many miracles?'   23 Then I will tell them plainly, 'I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!'   24 Therefore everyone who hears these words of mine...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Today's Verse   Commentary on Deuteronomy 30:15-20   (Read Deuteronomy 30:15-20)   What could be said more moving, and more likely to make deep and lasting impressions? Every man wishes to obtain life and good, and to escape death and evil; he desires happiness, and dreads misery. So great is the compassion of the Lord, that he has favoured men, by...
Verse of the Day
  Romans 4:25 In-Context   23 The words it was credited to him were written not for him alone,   24 but also for us, to whom God will credit righteousness-for us who believe in him who raised Jesus our Lord from the dead.   25 He was delivered over to death for our sins and was raised to life for our justification. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved