How are DC schools getting kids to class? By offering tutoring – lots of it.

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Education disruptions during the pandemic triggered a scramble to help students in the United States. Many school districts quickly zeroed in on tutoring – something typically only wealthy families could afford. 

When Washington, D.C., schools launched intensive tutoring programs, student achievement improved. And more kids started showing up each day, too. Now, as far as some educators are concerned, results like those are bolstering the case for tutoring as an integral part of public schooling. A key challenge is finding funding.

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Educators knew tutoring could help with pandemic-related learning loss. With signs that it is also reducing absenteeism, some in education are wondering how the tool might have a more permanent place in the school day.

For Principal Akela Dogbe at Moten Elementary School two things made a difference: The tutors provided a steady presence in children’s lives, and they delivered tailored instruction. If data from the school’s i-Ready assessment software showed a student struggling with division, that’s what the tutoring would address.

At Moten Elementary, 52% of students were learning at grade level for English language arts by the end of this past school year, up from 13% in the 2021-2022 year. In math, grade-level achievement grew from 39% of students to 62%.

“That sense of belonging absolutely made our students feel loved, challenged, and prepared,” the principal says. “They had the adult that they needed to connect with outside of just their teacher.”

When many Washington, D.C., schools launched intensive tutoring programs after the COVID-19 closures, staff observed a pleasant surprise: More kids started showing up each day.

The higher attendance rates – on top of improved math and reading skills – proved a welcome side effect of an initiative aimed at bridging students’ learning gaps. 

Education disruptions during the pandemic triggered a scramble to help students in the United States who had fallen behind academically. Many school districts quickly zeroed in on tutoring – from online to in person. It put a strategy once considered a privilege for the wealthy few into the mainstream. Now, as far as some educators and researchers are concerned, results like those in Washington are bolstering the case for tutoring as an integral part of public schooling. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Educators knew tutoring could help with pandemic-related learning loss. With signs that it is also reducing absenteeism, some in education are wondering how the tool might have a more permanent place in the school day.

“This is most likely to happen if parents both want this and believe that they can get this – and deserve to get this – at school,” says Susanna Loeb, a professor of education at Stanford University in California. 

Amid the flurry of activity in recent years, researchers and policy advocates are increasingly pointing to a specific kind of tutoring as the most effective. Known as “high-impact” or “high-dosage,” it generally refers to tutoring that happens at least three times a week for 30-minute sessions with groups of four or fewer students. And if it occurs during the regular school day? Even better.

“Done right, in-school tutoring raises academic results and builds student-adult relationships that help diminish the sense of isolation that has afflicted many students in the wake of the pandemic,” wrote Liz Cohen, policy director for FutureEd, an education think tank at Georgetown University, in a report released earlier this year. “It has the potential to become a valuable and lasting component of how schools teach students.”

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