speeches · June 28, 2021
Regional President Speech
Tom Barkin · President
Home / News / Speeches / Thomas I Barkin / 2021
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educational disparities and COVID-19.
We spent the spring talking to educators, administrators, researchers and policymakers
about how the COVID-19 pandemic has a�ected students and what we can do to help close
the gaps. We learned a lot — and it wasn’t always what we were expecting.
•
White students had more access to in-person school. Overall, black and Hispanic students
were less likely to be given the option to return to in-person school. But even when
students did have the option to return to in-person school, minority families were
more likely to remain virtual — perhaps because they faced higher infection and
fatality rates from COVID-19. But it also means these students may face greater
learning loss as research shows that virtual learning is an imperfect substitute for face-
to-face instruction. Income and wealth were a contributing factor, as higher-income
families had more resources for private schools, tutors and learning “pods.”
•
Recovering that learning loss is going to take an intense and dedicated e�ort. That includes
summer school, high-intensity tutoring, acceleration academies and the like. These
solutions can be unpopular and are expensive to implement at scale, but the cost pales
in comparison to the cost if we do nothing.
•
Parents are going to need help. We heard from educators across the region that parental
involvement, especially in lower-income communities where students are already at
risk, is a challenge, whether that’s staying home to help kids get online or driving them
to extra tutoring sessions. It’s not because parents don’t want to help — it’s because
they’re riding a bus for hours to get to work, as we heard in Yemassee, South Carolina;
or because they’re themselves looking for work; or because they don’t have a car.
Solutions need to recognize and address these barriers.
•
We have e�ective tools to increase access to higher education — we need to expand them.
Despite the di�erences in their schools, both Ángel Cabrera and Meredith Woo
advocated for a major expansion of the federal Pell Grant program, which gives grants
to undergraduate students with exceptional �nancial need and generally don’t have to
be repaid. We’ve come to similar conclusions from our own research and outreach on
the potential upside of Pell Grants, speci�cally allowing students to use Pell Grants at
community colleges to pay for noncredit workforce training and credential programs
that would bene�t students, schools, employers and taxpayers.
•
Broadband access isn’t only an issue in rural areas. We also heard from educators in
urban areas about the challenges their students face getting connected: sometimes
they live in areas with poor service, sometimes they can’t a�ord service, sometimes
they don’t have devices and sometimes all three. Expanding broadband access is
critical. As one panelist, Oleta Garrett Fitzgerald (Southern Regional Director, Children’s
Defense Fund) explained, “[N]ot having internet in 2021 is like not having lights.”
•
More money alone isn’t the solution. Allocating money is just the beginning — we also
need to make a concerted e�ort to distribute the money to where it’s needed most and
reduce the hang-ups that make it hard to spend. That requires e�ective alignment
through partnerships — nonpro�ts, local governments, and private companies pulling
in the same direction — to build awareness and capacity in communities.
Amid all the challenges, though, we learned about some unexpected silver linings.
•
Stimulus funding helped schools meet long-standing goals. For example, we talked to
administrators who were able to purchase computers, mobile devices and other
technology that had been on their wish lists for years. Vance-Granville Community
College, in North Carolina, used stimulus funds to buy tractor trailers for its new truck
driver training course.
•
Virtual learning helped the best teachers reach more students. In a typical setup, a teacher
only reaches the students in his or her classroom. But with online instruction, the most
talented and experienced teachers could help students beyond their four walls.
•
Virtual learning helped meet the needs of some underserved populations. We learned
about incarcerated students in Baltimore, for example, who gained access to materials
and instruction they’d never had before — and thrived.
By most measures, the pandemic may be in the rearview mirror — infections are falling,
vaccinations are rising, businesses are reopening, and schools are planning to resume in-
person instruction in the fall. Still, our period of remote learning has led to new challenges,
including addressing learning loss and its implications for labor force participation and
access to higher education. I greatly appreciate all who joined us for this dialogue.
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Cite this document
APA
Tom Barkin (2021, June 28). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20210629_tom_barkin
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20210629_tom_barkin,
author = {Tom Barkin},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2021},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20210629_tom_barkin},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}