Dutch kids lost 20 per cent of a school year’s learning after lockdown

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PHOTO: Charisse Kenion/Unsplash
PHOTO: Charisse Kenion/Unsplash

University of Oxford researchers say there is "clear evidence" Dutch students learnt less during lockdown than in a typical year after comparing national exam scores before and after the country’s eight-week lockdown, and also comparing them to the same periods in the three previous years. Despite the country's response being a “best-case scenario”, with relatively short lockdown, equitable school funding, and the world’s highest rate of broadband access, their results reveal a learning loss of about three percentile points, which they say is equivalent to one-fifth of a school year. The team says the findings imply that students made “little or no progress while learning from home” and suggest losses even larger in countries with weaker infrastructure or longer school closures.

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Organisation/s: University of Oxford, UK; Stockholm University, Sweden
Funder: P.E. was supported by the Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life, and Welfare (FORTE), Grant 2016-07099; Nuffield College; and the Leverhulme Center for Demographic Science, The Leverhulme Trust. A.F. was supported by the UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and the German Academic Scholarship Foundation. M.D.V. was supported by the UK ESRC and Nuffield College.
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