Beyond the Pandemic: Long-Term Changes and Challenges for K-12 Education in Florida

From kindergarten to 12th grade, students across Florida have faced extraordinary disruption to traditional in-person learning during the pandemic. Much like the rest of the nation, Florida’s more than 2.7 million K-12 students had to finish out the remainder of the 2019-2020 school year through remote learning. By the spring semester in 2020, more than 79.2 percent of Florida households with school-age children reported using some form of online learning.

The collective weight of school shutdowns, distance learning, and outside stressors had an immediate impact on student learning. An early study estimated that students would return to class in fall 2020 with around 70 percent of the learning gains in reading and 50 percent of the learning gains in math relative to previous years. When testing data became more readily available during the beginning of the 2020-2021 academic school year, researchers found student achievement to be a mixed bag. Nationwide, performance in reading appeared rather consistent when compared to fall 2019; however, student performance in math was markedly lower than in previous years, averaging between five to ten percentile points lower.

Supplementing this finding, national exam data from Curriculum Associates, which included Florida students in the sample, found the percentage of students ready for grade-level work declined during the 2020-2021 school year by an average of 9.1 percentage points for math and 4.8 percentage points for reading. Concurrently, the percentage of students learning below-grade level increased during the 2020-2021 school year, especially in math. Unfinished learning was particularly pronounced for students in grades 3-5 where the percentage of students on grade level for math was around 13 percentage points lower. Findings in Florida paralleled national trends. In Miami-Dade County, for example, the state’s largest school district, officials reported that around 43 percent of students tested in pre-K to third grade were below grade level in reading and around 54 percent of students were below grade level in math.

Unfinished student learning in the short-run, if not made up for, can potentially turn into long-term economic losses. Learning disruptions can lower lifetime educational attainment, affecting employability and productivity. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, by 2045, there may be a 2.7 percent decrease in the number of college-educated workers ages 29 to 39 due to education disruptions in 2020. Studies vary in their economic forecasts, suggesting students’ lifetime earnings may fall anywhere from $16,000 to $82,000 (in 2020 dollars) depending on the magnitude of learning disruptions. In aggregate, this equates to more than $173 billion in U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) losses by 2040, absent any efforts to accelerate learning. It should be emphasized that these forecasts are rough estimates and can be greatly reduced by concerted efforts to address unfinished learning during the present.

Documents to download

Previous Article Monitoring and Oversight of General Obligation Bonds to Improve Broward County Schools: SMART Program Quarterly Report Review for the Quarter Ended March 31, 2021
Next Article 2020 Annual Report
Print
5141
0Upvote 0Downvote
«April 2025»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
31123
The What, Why, and How of the Florida TaxWatch Budget Turkey Watch Report

The What, Why, and How of the Florida TaxWatch Budget Turkey Watch Report

Florida TaxWatch’s annual Budget Turkey Watch Report for 2025 meticulously examines the state budget to identify appropriations that deviate from sound fiscal management principles. Below is an expanded overview of what Budget Turkeys are, why they are identified, and how they are determined.

Read more
4
Using Microelectronic Sensors to Continuously Monitor Vertical Infrastructure

Using Microelectronic Sensors to Continuously Monitor Vertical Infrastructure

This Florida TaxWatch report explores how microelectronic smart sensor networks can proactively monitor vertical infrastructure to detect issues such as structural fatigue, corrosion, or damage before they lead to catastrophic failures, as seen in the 2021 Champlain Towers South collapse (98 deaths) and the 2018 Florida International University pedestrian bridge collapse (6 deaths).

Read more
56
789
The Voter Guide for the City of North Port’s May 13, 2025 Referendum

The Voter Guide for the City of North Port’s May 13, 2025 Referendum

The City of North Port, Florida's second fastest growing city in the United States, faces significant challenges from rapid urbanization, population growth, and ongoing recovery from Hurricane Ian's devastating impact in 2022. This Florida TaxWatch report examines the implications of the May 13, 2025 special election referendum, which asks voters to decide on several critical municipal issues.

Read more
1011
Fair Share Taxes Driven Away by Electric Vehicles

Fair Share Taxes Driven Away by Electric Vehicles

Proposed solutions include redistributing a portion of the sales tax collected at EV charging stations to the STTF and adopting a hybrid approach that combines higher registration fees with targeted EV taxes. These proposals aim to ensure that all drivers contribute their “fair share” toward maintaining Florida’s transportation infrastructure in the face of rapid technological change.

Read more
1213
14
Extending the Local Communication Services Tax Increase Moratorium and a Sales Tax Exemption for Broadband Equipment Should be  Part of Any Tax Relief Package this Session

Extending the Local Communication Services Tax Increase Moratorium and a Sales Tax Exemption for Broadband Equipment Should be Part of Any Tax Relief Package this Session

Florida TaxWatch's CST and Broadband Equipment report examines the impact of the high Communications Services Tax (CST) on broadband infrastructure investment and consumer expenses. The report details how Florida’s current CST ranks among the highest in the nation and explores its effects on both businesses and low-income households, who are particularly vulnerable to the disproportionate burden of such taxes on essential wireless services.

Read more
151617181920
21
Taxpayer Independence Day 2025

Taxpayer Independence Day 2025

Florida TaxWatch’s Florida Taxpayer Independence Day 2025 report commemorates the symbolic April 21 date when the average Floridian has earned enough to satisfy all federal, state, and local tax obligations. In 2025, Floridians spend 110 days—until 11:24 a.m.—paying taxes each year before they begin earning for themselves.

Read more
222324252627
2829301234
567891011

Archive