2023
August
11
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 11, 2023
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Jackie Valley
Education Writer

School bus engines are rumbling, and parents are posting sentimental first-day photos, signaling the start of another academic year.

It’s back to class for thousands of children across the United States, with more start dates in the coming weeks. Inevitably, this time of year conjures hopeful feelings of fresh starts and endless opportunities. New teachers, new friends, new knowledge.

The fruits of the academic experience, however, rely on students actually being in school. And that’s the problem. More than 1 in 4 students were considered chronically absent during the 2021-22 school year, according to data compiled and analyzed by Thomas Dee, an education professor at Stanford University, in partnership with The Associated Press.

The analysis examined data from 40 U.S. states and Washington, D.C., giving a robust national portrait of chronic absenteeism, defined as students missing 10% or more of school days. Before the pandemic, in the 2018-19 academic year, about 15% of students missed that much school. But the rate grew to 28% during the 2021-22 school year. That’s 6.5 million more students, Dr. Dee says.

In two states that have released more recent data, the problem has persisted.

“What I found was that the state-level growth in chronic absenteeism was actually unrelated to a measure of COVID infection rates over this period,” Dr. Dee said during a media call earlier this week.

That means other factors are at play. Could students’ fragile mental health be causing them to miss school? Or have they simply lost the desire to attend classes?  

These are questions that educators, researchers, and – yes – even journalists will be exploring as a new school year unfolds. Most problems in the education realm don’t yield simple answers. Instead, nuanced reasons typically explain troubling trend lines. 

We’re here to help tell that story and look toward solutions. Please drop me a line if you know people – students, parents, school staff members, or others – who are taking steps to boost classroom attendance and, in turn, brighten the next generation’s future. My email is valleyj@csmonitor.com.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A little-known but fruitful partnership in space between the United States and Ukraine has come to an end, a victim of the war with Russia. But the Antares program has left warm memories on both sides.

Henry Gass/The Christian Science Monitor
Gifts sent to Uvalde, Texas, after the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in May 2022 sit in a box at El Progreso Memorial Library. The library has launched a project to archive the response to the tragedy.

The public library in Uvalde, Texas, is documenting the “outpouring of love” after the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School last year, helping the town to process and heal. 

Podcast

How good data deepens understanding

Integrity earns trust. The work of a Monitor graphics designer is to inform, not to persuade. That means sifting for stats that can help readers make up their own minds about complex stories, and sharing them with clarity.

Where Disinformation Gets Destroyed

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Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor
Ukrainian volunteer Valentyna Lushchynska serves diners at a canteen that provides sanctuary and 2,500 free meals a day to soldiers heading for the front.

When is a roadside cafe more than a roadside cafe? When it’s in Ukraine, and the service runs from free borscht to restoring wounded soldiers’ will to live.

In Pictures

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
The atrium in the American Museum of Natural History's new wing, the Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation, echoes the weathered rock formations and canyons of the American West. It opened May 5 and was designed by architect Jeanne Gang.

By promoting a bug’s-eye view, the new wing at the American Museum of Natural History challenges our preconceived notions of scale and significance.


The Monitor's View

Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP
Actor Walt Keller, dressed as Mister Rogers, carries a healing message on the picket line outside Universal Studios in Hollywood, Aug. 4, 2023.

The union representing screenwriters, and the studios that turn their words into films and television shows, have agreed to restart formal negotiations to end a strike that has stalled the entertainment industry all summer. Those talks were set to begin today.

The dispute has already cost California’s economy $3 billion, according to one estimate. But it has also surfaced qualities of thought that may guide Hollywood through a transition that is about profoundly more than labor contracts.

The strikes are “not merely about better pay, improved working conditions, and regulations on AI use, but rather, a potent call for the recognition of human dignity and artistic integrity,” wrote Wilbur Greene, an Australian editor and literary agent. They are “a mirror reflecting the broader struggles across creative industries, where financial gains often overshadow the importance of creative integrity and human values.”

Throughout the industry’s history, evolutions in technology have brought periodic upheaval. This is one of those moments. Streaming platforms and production studios owned by high-tech companies have disrupted how Hollywood once nurtured writers. Their stable career paths have become uncertain gig work. Artificial intelligence now poses additional challenges.

One consequence is a loss of diverse voices at the very moment society is demanding an ever-widening range of storytelling. Screenwriting is no longer “a job that is accessible for low-income workers, non-white workers, nor workers who grew up far outside metropolitan cities,” noted Ruth Fowler, a seasoned writer and filmmaker, in a recent chronicle of her own struggle to make ends meet. “And yet, these are the voices we so desperately need.”

Labor disputes yield to easy demonization. The pioneer of shorter series and streaming, Netflix, is a ready villain. But a recent conversation among actors, writers, and producers at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University went deeper. The strikes, they agreed, are compelling Hollywood toward unity on two critical and neglected issues: transparency in a swiftly changing business environment and a defense of human creativity as inimitable and inestimable.

“We’re not just charged with educating our students on how to make art, we are charged with educating them on how to make a life in art,” Brandon J. Dirden, a professional actor and associate arts professor of graduate acting, told the Tisch forum. “This conversation, this moment in time, is essential to how they are going to make their lives in art.”

Peter Newman, a producer and head of the MBA/MFA dual degree program in graduate film, agreed. “Students should understand the entire picture, understand what every side is saying, not just one individual point of view,” he said. “This industry is cyclical and resilient. Real talent will always eventually prevail. ... There will be a solution.”

It may perhaps be found in a renewal of the Bible’s insight that every laborer – whether writer, actor, or producer – is worthy of his or her hire.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Turning to God for inspiration and guidance, we’re better able to move forward with peace and confidence.


Viewfinder

Rick Bowmer/AP
Sunlight breaks over a mountain framing what’s left of Lahaina, Hawaii, on Aug. 10, 2023, after wildfires destroyed about 80% of the historic town on the island of Maui. Dry conditions, high winds, and low humidity contributed to what Hawaii’s governor says is likely the worst natural disaster in the state’s history. President Joe Biden has approved federal disaster relief amid urgent needs to fully contain ongoing fires, search for missing people, relocate and house those who have been displaced, and restore communications.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

We’re so glad you joined us today. Come back next week, when correspondent Sarah Matusek will be reporting from Hawaii on the aftermath of the fires there.

More issues

2023
August
11
Friday

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