Military Family Students Face Extra Transition Obstacles Beyond COVID Hurdles
- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 12/07/20
If
the typical American student has had to face turmoil in education
this year, students who are the children of military parents face it
throughout their young lives. More than three-quarters (77 percent)
have moved twice or more during grades K-5, four in 10 (42 percent)
have moved just as often in grades 6-8. And a quarter have done the
same as high schoolers. A recent
survey
reported that the military family students take between one and three
months to adjust to a new school. The hardest grade for adjustment?
Ninth.
As
a student of a parent in the U.S. Navy, told researchers, "Sure,
I have lots of stories of my fun, exotic travels but it all has a
price. I have attended four different schools in the past four years
and it is not easy. In fact, it’s pretty exhausting. I might seem a
little cold, but it's only because I've learned that you never know
when you might have to move and suddenly say goodbye to your
friends."
Each
time the students move, they told researchers, they have to adjust to
the new school's requirements, schedules and resources; take a
different version of the entry-level exam; maneuver through the
"disparity" in school technology; and deal with "a lot
of different teaching styles" based on the areas where they
live.
On
top of those hurdles, frequently, schools require the students to
repeat courses they've already taken, face different graduation
requirements from state to state and, because of the constant moving,
can't always participate in extracurricular activities and "rarely
have the opportunity to take enjoyable courses that would pertain to
a possible career path."
The
survey was undertaken before the COVID-19 shift to online learning by
the Military
Child Education Coalition,
a nonprofit that advocates for "quality educational
opportunities" for the 1.2 million children whose parents are in
military. The project drew responses from 5,100 military-connected
students in high school as well as parents of K-12 students, veterans
and educators.
Social
and emotional supports were particularly important for this group of
students. They expressed frustration with a "lack of control in
life choices and circumstances; " the need to adjust to and
figure out how to work "in an entirely new environment where the
social norms may be very different from their previous location";
and hostility from other students due to differences in political
ideology, "lack of compassion from school personnel" and
having little access to extended family members. The top
social-emotional concerns for students were feeling accepted and
"fitting in" to a new school culture, making friends and
managing stress. Those also ranked in the top three for parents and
professionals.
Being
unprepared for curriculum differences ranked high among the academic
concerns expressed by respondents. That was number one for students
and number two for parents and those in "professional"
roles, such as teachers, counselors or principals. Addressing
variations in state academic standards was also in the top three
(number two for students, number one for parents and number three for
the professionals).
Section
504 and special education rules and regulations have proven
especially challenging to this segment of families. Twenty-four
percent of parents said they had a student with "exceptional
needs." Among their worries: inconsistency between schools
regarding plans and the reduction in services that can happen when a
student moves from special education, per the state or district
regulation, to a Section 504 plan. As the report explained, "The
new school might require testing to confirm the need for services,
while services might be reduced in scope from the previous school,
and/or staff might be unwilling or unable to provide services stated
in the IEP/IAP." If those students are placed in a regular
classroom for monitoring and interventions in the least restrictive
environment, even temporarily, they said, learning gaps begin to
widen.
One
area where definite improvements could be made, according to parent
respondents, was communication. As school transitions are occurring
due to military demands, parents have to hustle. Yet often, they told
researchers, phone calls and emails weren't returned; there was a
"lack of timeliness in response to records requests"; and
websites had outdated information regarding school rules, regulations
and schedules.
While
the school professionals reported high confidence in assessing
transcripts and eligibility of incoming military students, they were
"least confident" in specific areas: enrolling early
learners (50 percent said they weren't confident), handling the
differences between states regarding graduation exit exams (64
percent) and dealing with graduation-waiver requirements for students
who have moved in their senior years of high school (67 percent).
The
report offered guidance on how schools can meet the needs of
military-connected students. A biggie for the students was having a
"student-led, campus-based student transition program."
Parents suggested designating an on-site staff member to act as a
"military liaison" or point of contact. Both groups also
suggested that schools provide a web page with information that
supports making the transition to the school, having specific
activities for military-connected students and providing professional
development to staff on how to support military students.
The
full report is openly available on
the MCEC website.
About the Author
Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.