While this is not an exhaustive list, I believe there are five key areas we should focus on to ensure we meet the needs of all students:
1. Provide increased, tailored supports for our students: As we grapple with how to make up for a year of lost learning, we need to offer students varied supports to catch them up to where they need to be. We should be intentional about offering ample resources to make this possible: extra tutoring, additional intervention supports, strategic and differentiated summer school instruction, targeted teacher PD, and parent resources to help their kids at home.
2. Equitably allocate resources and learning opportunities: As evidenced by years of ASD data, our most marginalized students have been suffering disproportionately for far too long. We also need to allocate resources and learning opportunities equitably to ensure that our kids who need the most support receive it, and that all kids have equal opportunity to gain entry into gifted and talented programs.
3. Provide improved and relevant 21st century educational opportunities, including digital and financial literacy: We are living in a digital age, where technological proficiency is critical for students to develop the skills they need to succeed in today’s economy regardless of their pathway. Not only are these tools essential for remote education, but they have long been essential to all learning in the 21st century (e.g., to complete homework, access information, learn basic research skills, etc.). We need to both close the digital divide by addressing the massive inequities in access to devices and connectivity, and increase the provision of innovative curricula and instructional supports for our teachers that will help them deliver a relevant education to all children. Additionally, a key aspect of ensuring students are college and/or career ready is ensuring they have the tools to make financial decisions for themselves. It is our responsibility to send students out into the world equipped with the tools to build the futures they want for themselves. We need to make financial literacy a core component of our students’ educational experiences.
4. Provide students with more fresh air time during the school day: There are countless studies that show how spending time outside improves overall health, mood, behavior and cognitive function, especially for children. If we are serious about improving our students’ academic performance and overall well-being, we need to substantially increase the amount of time they are spending in nature.
5. Offer students more social emotional support and culturally relevant instruction: We need to provide students with the supports necessary to create the safe, inclusive, and welcoming learning environments they deserve. This includes offering more mental health services, focusing deeply on social emotional learning, and expanding culturally relevant instructional practices so students can see themselves in the content they’re learning.