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Kristian Bernt Karlson
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Publisher: Journals Gateway
European Societies (2023) 25 (3): 468–488.
Published: 27 May 2023
Abstract
View articletitled, No evidence of a major learning slide 14 months into the COVID-19 pandemic in Denmark
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for article titled, No evidence of a major learning slide 14 months into the COVID-19 pandemic in Denmark
ABSTRACT We study the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on children's academic performance in Denmark 14 months into the pandemic using nationwide and exceptionally rich data on reading test scores and family background ( N ≈ 200,000 per year). We find no evidence of a major learning loss. While pupils in grade 8 experienced a three percentile points loss in reading performance, pupils in grades 2 and 4 experienced a learning gain of about five percentile points, possibly resulting from school closures being significantly longer among older (22 weeks) than younger children (eight weeks). Importantly and in contrast to pre-registered expectations, we find little evidence of widening learning gaps by family background. Further analyses point to that all of these patterns were already in place a few months into pandemic, suggesting that learning gaps did not widen during subsequent, longer school closures. We also find some indication that boys and low-performing pupils suffered more from school closures than girls and high-performing pupils, but these differences are minor. We discuss which political measures may have been instrumental for overcoming the COVID-19 learning slide in Denmark.
Includes: Supplementary data