
Pandemic exacerbates attendance challenges, say N.W.T. superintendents
CBC
School attendance has been an issue in the N.W.T. for years — but superintendents throughout the territory say the pandemic has added an extra layer of difficulty to keeping students in class.
In the 2016-2017 academic year, the average attendance rate for grade school students across the territory was about 83 per cent — meaning, on average, students were missing nearly one day of school per week.
In smaller communities, the average attendance rate that year was 77 per cent.
But during the pandemic, many more students in the territory have been missing class, whether in-school, or online.
"Compared to pre-COVID, I would dare say that all schools in the N.W.T. have somehow been affected," said Philippe Brûlot, superintendent of the Dehcho Divisional Education Council (DEC). "Definitely, the Dehcho has seen a decrease in attendance over the past year and a half because of COVID — that's for sure."
Shannon Barnett-Aikman, the assistant deputy minister of Education, Culture and Employment said the territorial government is still "working to understand the impact of COVID-19 on learning."
"Just like other jurisdictions, we do have some data gaps in assessing the impact of the pandemic on students, given that measurements of attendance, and attainment levels were hampered during the last school year," she said.
While the decision to open schools or not ultimately rests with the individual school districts, the territorial government hopes they will remain open as much as possible, Barnett-Aikman said.
"We know that being in-person, in-school provides benefits that are really difficult to replicate — if not impossible to replicate — through a distance learning approach," she said. "These include … a whole host of measures that speak to social growth and development, improved instruction and learning [and] a variety of extracurricular activities that are conducive to a safe environment under the current reality."
Brûlot did not have hard data on how many of his division's approximately 440 students had been missing class this academic year, but he said the pandemic has had a "huge impact on attendance," with perhaps 10 or 20 per cent fewer students than usual attending class.
"Parents are very worried when there is an outbreak in the community — which is understandable," he said. "Over the course of the pandemic, there have been situations where you cannot send kids to school."
Renee Closs, superintendent of the Sahtú DEC, has seen a similar trend. She says the pivot to online learning has made it more difficult for schools to track attendance in the traditional sense, but as students return to in-person classes, the data is more clear.
Students at Mackenzie Mountain School students in Norman Wells have been back in school since Jan. 24 and Closs says attendance for junior kindergarten to Grade 9 was 68 per cent that week..
"Students were excited to return to school for in-person learning and parents were trusting that the school was a safe place for their children," Closs added.