Today EducationNext released the results of a survey that examines the impact of the pandemic on Americans’ views of public education. Some of the results are not surprising: support for homeschooling and raising teacher salaries is up, overall perceptions of school quality is down. But right now only 22% of this nationally representative sample of 1,784 American adults give their local public schools an A or a B grade.
Here’s what’s striking to EdNext analysts:
And there’s this:
There has been much discussion in the media and elsewhere about the growth in partisanship among Democrats and Republicans on education issues. EdNext finds this is certainly true of mask mandates and teaching about systemic racism: far more Democrats and far fewer Republicans support these issues. Yet the researchers make the distinction between partisanship and polarization. The former could be greater internal consistency, or more Democrats adhering to the party line, and the latter denotes the extent to which people “have adopted more extreme views relative to more centrist or moderate views.” In sum, the results of this survey can’t prove polarization but they do prove growing partisanship. For example,the difference between Democrats and Republicans in positive evaluations of teachers unions is nearly 40 percentage points.
Here is the graphic of the overview. For the full report, see here.
(Photo courtesy of EdNext.)
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