Citation - US Department of Education on Puerto Rico and Improving Educational Outcomes for Students
1 2021-12-17T17:30:11-05:00 Joel Paulson 4d6c5f686dd11906452a016926c982c7e099c170 19 1 plain 2021-12-17T17:30:11-05:00 Joel Paulson 4d6c5f686dd11906452a016926c982c7e099c170This page is referenced by:
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Former Schools in Puerto Rico
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Hurricane Maria did a great amount of damage to the educational system in Puerto Rico. However, much of the damage they did was in excerbating preexisting issues in the system. Since 2006, the total of operational schools on the Island was 1,515 (its peak) and in 2018, sat at just 855.
This problem is not germane to any one area on the Island; "Most school closures disproportionately occurred in the Island's rural areas (65%) relative to urban areas (35%)." (1) As the map in the previous page displayed, the school closures occurred all over the island. The Hurricane also
caused students to miss, on average, 78 days of school (2), and the fourth grade and eighth grade mathematical benchmark exams showed that Puerto Rico declined in its achievement benchmarks from 2017 (the year the hurricane hit) to 2019. (3) Furthermore, the number of children that are in the Puerto Rico educational system with special needs is already high, and their education is struggling due to the Hurricane; The institute’s study also found that in addition to the 10.3 percent of special needs students who still have not had their special education services restored,more than 84 percent of students in special education experienced an interruption in their education services after Maria. In addition, the report detailed the share of students who were having various troubles in school—the institute found 12.3 percent of children in the study were having trouble concentrating"(4).To tie in current events, the Hurricane decimated the island, but the following earthquakes, withholding of Government Grants (5) and COVID-19 pandemic have stalled relief and repair efforts across the whole island (not just in the educational sector). That being said, the children of Puerto Rico need consistency and structure in their educational careers; as spoken about prior; "Puerto Rico’s students cannot afford to miss any more school. When math results from the 2017 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)—the United States’ report card on the progress of its public schools—were released, Puerto Rico was the poorest performer in a group that also included all 50 states and Washington, D.C.* The island received an average score of 190 for fourth-grade students, a full 49 points below Louisiana, the U.S. state ranked last, which scored a 239." (6)
Continue to read my policy brief, outlining some important steps for Puerto Rico and its educational system.
The above picture is of Escuela de la Comunidad de Bella Vista, an elementary school that was forced to close because of Hurricane Maria.
See this photo essay from the New York Times to see how the Hurricane impacted school buildings and the communities they resided in.
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Policy Brief
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A Brief on the Educational System in Puerto Rico
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Key Points:
1. A total of 265 public schools, or 24%, have closed, and 855 schools remained open in the 2018-2019 academic year. The total number of operational schools has declined from 1,515 at its peak in 2006 to 855 in 2018. (1)
2. "The absolute population change between the 2017 and 2018 estimate was -129,848. Moreover, this significant population drop reflects the impact of Hurricane Maria on the Island’s population, which resulted an immediate outmigration, especially of families with children" (2). Meaning that some of these issues are only going to be resolved when the issues outlined in this point are also resolved.
3. Fixing the System is important, but making sure that the school's incorporate trauma-responsible learning must also be a priority.Introduction
This policy brief outlines several key pooints and areas of concern with respect to the educational system in Puerto Rico post-Hurricane Maria. With increases in the decline of student enrollment in school, decreases in population, increases in school closures, and compounding events (earthquakes, Covid-19), the educational system in Puerto Rico is in trouble. That being said, there are a number of actors that have taken an interest, and active role, in attempting to fix the system and its flaws.
With all of the added events that have occurred after Hurricane Maria, the students in Puerto Rico are struggling to remain at their educational benchmarks. Following the aftermath of the Hurricane, the average Puerto Rican student missed 78 days of school (3). What is more, what followed the Hurricane was earthquakes, and after the earthquakes we reached the Pandemic. Puerto Rico and its students are struggling. Grade 4 and Grade 8 mathematical benchmarks show that in 2019, Puerto Rico declined in its achievement benchmarks since 2017. (4). What is more, President Trump and his administration obstructed the release of funds to aid in Puerto Rico’s infrastructural rebuild, and continued to obstruct them. A report by the Office of the Inspector General found that HUD officials knowingly missed deadlines for the releasing of the funds per Trump’s orders (5). In addition, former Secretary of Education Julia Keleher was indicted on fraud charges for defrauding the Educational System on the island out of $15 million dollars (6). All of this is to say that the island of puerto rico and its educational system is fighting more than just natural disasters. It is fighting corruption, racism, and infrastructural deficiencies.
This year, in November the Biden Administration approved the releasing of $990 million dollars to directly go to the aid of Puerto Rico’s educational system, and a total of $5 billion dollars to aid in Puerto Rico’s totalo infrastructural resolution, this money intending to aid in Post Hurricane Maria, Earthquake, and COVID-19 relief (7). With these funds, hopefully the island is able to address some of the fundamental issues with its educational system;
- Enrollment in public schools in Puerto Rico had been declining for several decades.
- Puerto Rico's education system maintained a high concentration of economically disadvantaged students and students with disabilities.
- Puerto Rico's K–12 public school system had also faced long-standing concerns about lagging student performance and high school graduation rates.
- The Puerto Rico education system has been facing financial strains due to several factors, including spending on additional services for students from low-income households and students with disabilities. (8)
Policy Recommendations:
The parallels between Puerto Rico’s educational system and that of New Orleans before Hurricane Katrina are strong and apparent. New Orleans’ system has seen improvement in the years after, its students and schools performing better than they were before Hurricane Katrina(9). This is the goal for Puerto Rico’s educational system, to perform better now, after Hurricane Maria, than it was before. In order for this to happen, simpy restoring the system that was in place before the Hurricane will not be enough, a revamping of the system must also occur. What this will look like, however, will depart from the almost entirely Public Charter School system that New Orleans has put in place after Hurricane Katrina (10), as Puerto Rico has to fix the educational system around the whole island, not just in one city. Some recommendations for how Puerto Rico should proceed are as follows;
- Identify and engage key partners.
- Perform additional analysis, detailed planning, and necessary adjustments to implement COAs.
- Update cost estimates.
- Conduct ongoing monitoring and formative evaluation.
- Consider dependencies with other courses of action.
- Rebuild public pre-K–12 school infrastructure.
- Consolidate and rebuild University of Puerto Rico infrastructure.
- Conduct landscape analysis and rebuild private nonprofit pre-K–12 school infrastructure.
- Improve longitudinal data system to support evidence-based policy.
- Perform multisector analysis to support resource allocation decisions related to schools.
- Conduct landscape analysis of early-childhood interventions and care opportunities.
- Consider the implementation of a student-based budget system.
- Strengthen school leadership pipeline.
- Develop and implement teacher pipeline program.
- Create new and enhance existing after-school and summer learning opportunities.
- Expand and update K–12 vocational programs.
- Augment tele-education/online education.
- Develop and implement a parent education program on school choice. (11)
"Project Fleur-de-Lis (PFDL) was established to provide a tiered approach to triage and treat children experiencing trauma symptoms after Hurricane Katrina. PFDL provides school screening in schools in New Orleans and three tiers of evidence-based treatment (EBT) to disaster-exposed children utilizing a public health approach to meet the various needs of students referred to the program, some stemming from the disaster itself, some related to prior exposure to violence, and some relating to preexisting conditions and educational delays." (12)
Like we learned in class, using the model formulated by New Orleans School system, Fleur-de-Lis, will help craft a Safe Environment for children to learn in. Using Fleur-de-Lis will help shape the Safe Healing and Learning Spaces environment that we discussed in class. Ensuring the mental health of the students will go a long way towards surmounting the other obstacles, that have been outlined so far, against their successful learning post Hurricane Maria. As outlined in the SHLS program, without a safe and structured learning environment, with relationships that prioritize this, long term negative effects on overall mental health and well-being can be seen on the children. (13) Following such a large trauma inducing event, this should be one of the most prioritized concepts.