Mass. official: 'Several' years needed to make up for lost l

Mass. official: 'Several' years needed to make up for lost learning time


Gov. Charlie Baker’s administration is moving to force K-8 public schools in Massachusetts to reopen this spring, but the state’s education commissioner says it’s going to take much longer to make up for the in-person learning time lost due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
“I think it’s going to be a several year process to get our kids back to where they need to be,” Jeff Riley, the Massachusetts commissioner of elementary and secondary education, said Friday morning during a press conference in Newburyport.
Baker noted one of the reasons the state is considering at-home MCAS testing this spring is simply to “get a sense about where kids are” academically in case they need summer programs to help them catch up. According to the governor, one of the difficulties teachers face is keeping track of how well students are absorbing information in remote models.

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