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Opinion: Online Learning Doesn’t Work for Low-Income Students Like Me. Here’s How We Can Do Better [calhealthreport.org]

 

By Jessica Nunez, Photo: Diego Cervo/iStock, California Health Report, January 11, 2022

For the past two years, student life has been different. The university I attend, UCLA, transitioned to virtual learning, which meant students couldn’t see a single professor or classmate in person. For students from low-income families, like me, this change was extremely challenging.

More than 70 percent of students attended school remotely during the first year of the pandemic, statistics show. This greatly impacted educational opportunities and learning. Black, Latinx and Native American students suffered the most. Not only did they suddenly find themselves isolated from their schools and peers, but their families and communities were disproportionately impacted by job losses, unequal access to health care and vulnerability to COVID-19 infections.

My senior year at UCLA was a struggle. I majored in cognitive science, and Spanish, community and culture. For my most difficult classes, I was used to being able to consult my professors in-person when I needed help. The pandemic changed that.

[Please click here to read more.]

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Thank you for sharing this @Lara Kain

We need to hear more from the mouths of our students to make us aware of the barriers they face.

Far too often "others" who make decisions for "us"

With all their good intentions

Do us a disservice when they make decisions based on their "world-view"

We ALL need to LISTEN to those "living it" as they know best

Sadly, many of us are not seen nor heard

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