Lessons from the past on how education has tackled unexpected disasters

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Liz WillenDear reader,
 
So much of what we’re going through during this frightening coronavirus era feels unprecedented, but there are actually some excellent examples from the recent past of how education has tackled unexpected disasters like fires, floods and hurricanes.
 
This week, The Hechinger Report examined lessons on how colleges and universities become lifelines for students and communities in the face of such emergencies. We also published an in-depth look at a personalized learning program that schools are finding has been helpful in the transition to remote learning. And, as part of our Guidance Gap series, we took you inside the world of a hard-working college counselor worried about her students. We love to hear from our readers, so stay healthy – and please consider becoming a member and supporting our work on #GivingTuesdayNow.

Liz Willen, Editor
 
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Main Idea 

Biggest gap year ever? One in 6 high school seniors may take a gap year  

Roughly one in six high school seniors say that they definitely or most likely won’t attend college in the fall because of the coronavirus; of those, 16 percent plan to take a gap year. But travel restrictions and a looming recession will restrict what they can do with that time.
Reading List 

The overlooked power of Zuckerberg-backed learning program lies offline  

The Summit Learning Program has its challenges, but offers big potential for schools that use it well.
 

What has happened when campuses shut down for other disasters? A coronavirus case study  

Fires, floods, hurricanes have shut down higher education in the past — with worrying results.
 

From private to public school: A college counselor straddles an economic divide  

College counseling is an afterthought in many high schools. Counselor Brad Ward was trying to change that. Then the coronavirus hit.
 

Coronavirus accelerates higher education’s trend toward distance learning  

The number of colleges where most students took some courses online has doubled since 2012.
 

Study: Deportations widen Latino-white achievement gaps at school  

Obama-era deportations associated with increased absenteeism and decreased math scores among Latino students.
 
Solutions 
"Why distance learning is a success in one California district", EdSource.

This week’s solutions section came from SolutionsU powered by Solutions Journalism Network and their database of solutions journalism. Search for more solutions.
👋 Contact Sarah Garland at garland@hechingerreport.org to give feedback on The Hechinger Report’s newsletters. Did you know we produce newsletters on early childhood, education research, the future of learning, higher education and the state of Mississippi? And it helps us if you recommend our newsletters to a friend. 
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