Parents’ confidence in public schools soared while approval of online learning grew sharply despite the COVID shutdown of schools this spring, according to an annual education survey.
Parents remained supportive of their schools’ response to the coronavirus even though a majority said student learning declined during remote instruction, saysMartin R. West, a lead researcher and author of the.
“We see it less as a sign that Americans thought everything went great and more as sympathy toward the extent of the challenge,” West says. “The other thing I would highlight is Americans are becoming more open to having students take courses online, particularly in high school.”
Over the last decade, parents’ willingness to have children take courses online has risen from 60% to 73%, according to the survey that was conducted in May.
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Parents expressed more overall support for schools when they also reported that their children had consistent contact with their teachers during online learning, West says.
High approval ratings
The survey also gauged parents’ opinion in several other key K-12 education issues:
1. Teacher pay:Support for teacher pay raises remained as high as it has been at any time over the last decade.
When parents were given information about teacher salaries in their state, 55% said pay should increasea jump of 19 percentage points over 2017.
Some 65% of parents who didn’t know the salaries backed an increase.
2. School spending: Support for increased school spending dipped in 2020, but remains higher than it was as far back as 2017.
Some 45% of Americans said that K-12 school spending should increase.
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Support is higher amongDemocrat (56%), Black (63%), and Hispanic (55%) respondents, compared to Republican (31%) and white (39%) respondents.
3. Opinion on public schools and teachers:COVID did not shake confidence in public schools.
Nearly 60% of respondents gave their local school an A or B grade, just two points down from last year;30% gave the nation’s public school system the same grade, the highest approval rating recorded by the survey.
Respondents also rated 61% of local teachers as either excellent or gooda 5-percentage-point increase since 2018. They only rated 14% of teachers as unsatisfactory.
4. School choice:Support for school-choice held steady or declined.
More than half of the respondents from both sides of the political aisle were most supportive ofgiving tax credits to fund private-school scholarships for low-income students.
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Republicans, meanwhile, were far more supportive of charter schools than were Democrats.
Private school tuition vouchers received strong support among Black and Hispanic for universal respondents.
5. Free college:55% of Americans endorse free attendance at public, four-year colleges, a dip of 5 percentage points since last year.
While nearly three-quarters of Democrats support free college, only29% of Republicans do.

