A target of educators for decades, the “Summer Slide” can be avoided, according to a new study from the RAND Corporation.
The study, “Making Summer Count,” also finds that the loss of knowledge and educational skills during the summer months is cumulative over the course of a student’s career and further widens the achievement gap between low- and upper-income students. It confirms that students who attend summer programs can disrupt the educational loss and do better in school than peers who do not attend the same programs.
“Despite long-term efforts to close the achievement gap between disadvantaged and advantaged students, low-income students continue to perform at considerably lower levels than their higher-income peers, particularly in reading,” said Jennifer McCombs, study co-author and a senior policy researcher at RAND, a nonprofit research organization. “Instruction during the summer has the potential to stop summer learning losses and propel students toward higher achievement.”
The study, commissioned by The Wallace Foundation and conducted by RAND Education, is the most comprehensive research on summer learning to date. Using extensive analysis of existing literature combined with field research, the study examines student summer learning loss and gain, the characteristics of effective summer learning programs and the costs associated with such programs.
It also gives specific recommendations on how school districts can overcome barriers to establishing successful programs.
“It is becoming increasingly clear that the conventional six-hour, 180-day school year is insufficient to give many disadvantaged students the education they deserve,” said Nancy Devine, director of communities at The Wallace Foundation. “This confirms the disproportionate impact of the ‘Summer Slide’ on low-income students, and suggests that high-quality summer learning programs, though challenging to develop, are a promising path forward.”
Researchers find that not all summer learning programs provide equal educational benefits to students. Moreover, many programs suffer from low attendance. Researchers find that students experience the most benefits when the summer programs include individualized instruction, parental involvement and small class sizes.
While a day of summer instruction costs less than a day of instruction during the school year, summer learning programs are an additional cost. The researchers found that cost is the main barrier to implementing and sustaining summer programs.
“One way school districts can make summer learning programs affordable and more effective is by partnering with community-based organizations,” said co-author Catherine Augustine, a senior policy researcher at RAND. “They are often less expensive than school district staff, and they offer enrichment opportunities that are often similar to those experienced by middle-income youth during the summer -- such as kayaking or chess, for example -- that encourage students to enroll and attend, both of which are critical to program effectiveness.”
Researchers make several recommendations for school districts and community leaders to plan and develop summer learning programs, including:
Researchers also recommend that policymakers at the federal, state and local levels continue funding summer learning programs, and clarify the extent to which existing funding sources can be allocated toward summer programs.
“Summertime offers an opportunity to help bridge the achievement gap and the opportunity gap,” McCombs said. “Summer learning programs can give students the chance to master material they did not learn in the previous school year, prevent learning loss, propel learning gains and provide low-income students with enrichment opportunities similar to those experienced by their middle-income peers.”
The full report, “Making Summer Count: How Summer Programs Can Boost Children’s Learning,” is available at www.rand.org and www.wallacefoundation.org.
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