Education
When You’re in the N.C.A.A. Tournament, but Not Fully In
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Lastly, a taut recreation started to show in Texas Southern’s favor. An automated bid to the N.C.A.A. basketball event was inside attain. An assistant coach knelt on the Texas Southern bench as if to begin a decisive dash to the end line. Gamers jumped to their toes, waving towels the way in which trainers cool boxers between rounds.
The knockout punch got here on a 17-2 run that despatched Texas Southern to an eventual 87-62 victory over top-seeded Alcorn State on Saturday within the championship recreation of the Southwestern Athletic Convention event.
The Tigers hugged and posed for pictures and climbed a ladder to chop down the nets. Josh White, a Texas Southern assistant, had clapped so laborious in the course of the pivotal stretch that he mentioned, “My arms really feel like they’re on hearth.”
But the reward for this stirring depth, for this sixth title within the final eight S.W.A.C. tournaments, was underwhelming. Texas Southern (18-12), a traditionally Black college positioned in Houston, was given a 16 seed and relegated but once more to the First 4, or play-in spherical, of the boys’s N.C.A.A. event. The Tigers will face Texas A&M-Corpus Christi, additionally a 16 seed, on Tuesday in Dayton, Ohio.
In impact, Texas Southern is within the 68-team discipline, however not absolutely in, and nonetheless has to show that it belongs. Continued frustration has led to a lot dialogue about how groups from traditionally Black faculties and universities can improve their entry, visibility and success in an period of extra questioning about racial bias.
“Upset, that’s an ideal phrase, however it provides us a possibility to let everyone know we’re not flukes and we should be” in the principle 64-team bracket, mentioned John Jones, a graduate guard for Texas Southern whose father, Johnny, is the staff’s head coach.
Members within the First 4 video games are the 4 lowest-seeded convention event champions and the 4 lowest-seeded at-large groups.
Norfolk State repeated as event champion of the Mid-Japanese Athletic Convention, the opposite H.B.C.U. league in Division I, however its compensation for a 24-6 document was a 16 seed in the principle event bracket and a gap recreation in opposition to Baylor, a No. 1 seed and the defending nationwide champion.
Robert Jones, the Norfolk State coach, mentioned {that a} 16 seed was “nonsense.” “I really feel disrespected, actually,” he advised reporters on Sunday.
In 1997, 2001 and 2012, M.E.A.C. groups seeded fifteenth ousted No. 2 seeds in among the biggest upsets within the males’s N.C.A.A. event. But H.B.C.U.s have for many years confronted boundaries to broad participation and development in probably the most broadly well-liked competitors in collegiate sports activities.
“Some folks have a look at equality and say, we have now a seat on the desk,” mentioned J. Kenyatta Cavil, a professor at Texas Southern and an skilled on H.B.C.U. sports activities. “However is that equitable so far as leveling the enjoying discipline?”
A staff from the S.W.A.C. or M.E.A.C. — and a number of other instances each — has been positioned within the play-in spherical of the N.C.A.A. males’s event in 21 of the previous 22 seasons. This displays, partly, the influence of the twin mission of basketball gamers at H.B.C.U.s, who’re additionally fund-raisers tasked with supplementing among the smallest athletic budgets in Division 1.
Many H.B.C.U.s play most or all of their nonconference video games on the highway, usually taking part in so-called “purchase” video games. Faculties earn roughly $75,000 to $100,000 per recreation to play groups in higher-rated conferences, in essence buying and selling fierce competitors and frequent defeat for paychecks. Texas Southern opened the season with seven consecutive highway defeats and didn’t play at house till Jan. 8. The Tigers needed to scramble by way of their convention schedule to breach .500 for the season.
This avalanche of early-season defeat helps clarify why the S.W.A.C. and M.E.A.C. obtain just one bid apiece to the N.C.A.A. event. Their groups are disproportionately positioned within the play-in spherical or seeded sixteenth in a area in opposition to a No. 1 seed, the place the possibilities of advancing are distant.
Charles McClelland, commissioner of the S.W.A.C. and a member of the N.C.A.A. Division I basketball committee, advised HBCU.com final 12 months that the present choice system was honest, saying, “It comes all the way down to a philosophy inside the Black faculties. Are you going to exit and get all the cash? Or are you going to attempt to put collectively a schedule that may permit successful?”
Norfolk State received 24 of 30 video games this season, however its scheduling technique didn’t elevate the Spartans’ seeding. A recreation in opposition to Loyola-Chicago, a latest postseason energy, was canceled due to Covid. Of Norfolk State’s opponents, solely Xavier of the Massive East Convention reached the N.C.A.A. event.
Progress for H.B.C.U.s was evident, although, within the pairings for the N.C.A.A. ladies’s event, which has expanded to 68 groups to match the boys’s discipline. Jackson (Miss.) State (23-6) went undefeated within the S.W.A.C. and obtained a 14 seed, which is uncommon and inspiring, on condition that no ladies’s staff from the league has received an N.C.A.A. event recreation.
The seeding “sends a message that ought to have been despatched a very long time in the past: Don’t underestimate H.B.C.U.s,” Jackson State ahead LaMiracle Sims mentioned.
So methods to additional elevate the standing of H.B.C.U.s? Felecia M. Nave, the president of Alcorn State, proposed that each one convention event champions be positioned into the principle event bracket, with solely at-large groups positioned into the First 4.
Jones, the Texas Southern coach, mentioned he would assist that change, noting that convention event champions “have received their approach in; they aren’t voted on by a committee.”
There are some benefits to the play-in spherical: dealing with a equally seeded opponent, enjoying earlier than a nationwide tv viewers with no competitors from different video games and having an opportunity to gather an extra payout from the N.C.A.A. basketball fund with a victory.
In 2018, Texas Southern was victorious within the First 4 and have become the primary staff with a shedding document to win an N.C.A.A. event recreation. In 2021, the Tigers received once more within the play-in spherical.
However being positioned in the principle bracket from the beginning confers “a sure degree of respect for the S.W.A.C. and the M.E.A.C.,” John Jones, the Texas Southern guard, mentioned.
Coach Jones mentioned he believed Texas Southern deserved to be positioned in the principle bracket and seeded greater than sixteenth, contemplating that it defeated Florida, then ranked twentieth, in the course of the common season.
He mentioned it will be financially onerous for Texas Southern and plenty of S.W.A.C. groups to play fewer “purchase” video games. “You don’t have a alternative,” Jones mentioned. “That’s how we fund our applications.”
To spice up its roster, Texas Southern has taken benefit of a switch rule that now permits gamers to modify faculties as soon as and play instantly as an alternative of sitting out a 12 months, making a type of free company.
All the Tigers’ prime gamers are transfers, together with ahead Brison Gresham, who performed within the Last 4 final season with the College of Houston. “I’ve been by way of sufficient wars to know that convention doesn’t matter,” Gresham mentioned. “When folks have a look at the S.W.A.C. and suppose the extent of play is low, that’s disrespect. It has plenty of powerful gamers.”
The convention has additionally begun hiring high-profile coaches. Jackson State, which employed the Corridor of Fame defensive again Deion Sanders to teach soccer, final week employed Mo Williams, who performed 13 seasons within the N.B.A., to teach males’s basketball. Cynthia Cooper-Dyke, the ladies’s coach at Texas Southern, received 4 titles as a participant within the W.N.B.A.
The stereotypical narrative for S.W.A.C. faculties has been that groups will probably be seeded fifteenth or sixteenth within the N.C.A.A. event and “needs to be joyful to be there,” mentioned Nathaniel Bell, an assistant coach for the Arkansas-Pine Bluff ladies’s staff. “However we’re up for the problem. What occurs if we will change that story line?”
Education
Video: Biden Apologizes for U.S. Mistreatment of Native American Children
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Biden Apologizes for U.S. Mistreatment of Native American Children
President Biden offered a formal apology on Friday on behalf of the U.S. government for the abuse of Native American children from the early 1800s to the late 1960s.
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The Federal government has never, never formally apologized for what happened until today. I formally apologize. It’s long, long, long overdue. Quite frankly, there’s no excuse that this apology took 50 years to make. I know no apology can or will make up for what was lost during the darkness of the federal boarding school policy. But today, we’re finally moving forward into the light.
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Los Angeles Bus Hijacked at Gunpoint
The person suspected of hijacking a bus which killed one person, was taken into custody after an hourlong pursuit by the Los Angeles Police Department early Wednesday morning.
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“Get him.”
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Education
The Youngest Pandemic Children Are Now in School, and Struggling
The pandemic’s babies, toddlers and preschoolers are now school-age, and the impact on them is becoming increasingly clear: Many are showing signs of being academically and developmentally behind.
Interviews with more than two dozen teachers, pediatricians and early childhood experts depicted a generation less likely to have age-appropriate skills — to be able to hold a pencil, communicate their needs, identify shapes and letters, manage their emotions or solve problems with peers.
A variety of scientific evidence has also found that the pandemic seems to have affected some young children’s early development. Boys were more affected than girls, studies have found.
“I definitely think children born then have had developmental challenges compared to prior years,” said Dr. Jaime Peterson, a pediatrician at Oregon Health and Science University, whose research is on kindergarten readiness. “We asked them to wear masks, not see adults, not play with kids. We really severed those interactions, and you don’t get that time back for kids.”
The pandemic’s effect on older children — who were sent home during school closures, and lost significant ground in math and reading — has been well documented. But the impact on the youngest children is in some ways surprising: They were not in formal school when the pandemic began, and at an age when children spend a lot of time at home anyway.
The early years, though, are most critical for brain development. Researchers said several aspects of the pandemic affected young children — parental stress, less exposure to people, lower preschool attendance, more time on screens and less time playing.
Yet because their brains are developing so rapidly, they are also well positioned to catch up, experts said.
The youngest children represent “a pandemic tsunami” headed for the American education system, said Joel Ryan, who works with a network of Head Start and state preschool centers in Washington State, where he has seen an increase in speech delays and behavioral problems.
Not every young child is showing delays. Children at schools that are mostly Black or Hispanic or where most families have lower incomes are the most behind, according to data released Monday by Curriculum Associates, whose tests are given in thousands of U.S. schools. Students from higher-income families are more on pace with historical trends.
But “most, if not all, young students were impacted academically to some degree,” said Kristen Huff, vice president for assessment and research at Curriculum Associates.
Recovery is possible, experts said, though young children have not been a main focus of $122 billion in federal aid distributed to school districts to help students recover.
“We 100 percent have the tools to help kids and families recover,” said Catherine Monk, a clinical psychologist and professor at Columbia, and a chair of a research project on mothers and babies in the pandemic. “But do we know how to distribute, in a fair way, access to the services they need?”
What’s different now?
“I spent a long time just teaching kids to sit still on the carpet for one book. That’s something I didn’t need to do before.”
David Feldman, kindergarten teacher, St. Petersburg, Fla.
“We are talking 4- and 5-year-olds who are throwing chairs, biting, hitting, without the self-regulation.”
Tommy Sheridan, deputy director, National Head Start Association
Brook Allen, in Martin, Tenn., has taught kindergarten for 11 years. This year, for the first time, she said, several students could barely speak, several were not toilet trained, and several did not have the fine motor skills to hold a pencil.
Children don’t engage in imaginative play or seek out other children the way they used to, said Michaela Frederick, a pre-K teacher for students with learning delays in Sharon, Tenn. She’s had to replace small building materials in her classroom with big soft blocks because students’ fine motor skills weren’t developed enough to manipulate them.
Perhaps the biggest difference Lissa O’Rourke has noticed among her preschoolers in St. Augustine, Fla., has been their inability to regulate their emotions: “It was knocking over chairs, it was throwing things, it was hitting their peers, hitting their teachers.”
Data from schools underscores what early childhood professionals have noticed.
Children who just finished second grade, who were as young as 3 or 4 when the pandemic began, remain behind children the same age prepandemic, particularly in math, according to the new Curriculum Associates data. Of particular concern, the students who are the furthest behind are making the least progress catching up.
The youngest students’ performance is “in stark contrast” to older elementary school children, who have caught up much more, the researchers said. The new analysis examined testing data from about four million children, with cohorts before and after the pandemic.
Data from Cincinnati Public Schools is another example: Just 28 percent of kindergarten students began this school year prepared, down from 36 percent before the pandemic, according to research from Cincinnati Children’s Hospital.
How did this happen?
“They don’t have the muscle strength because everything they are doing at home is screen time. They are just swiping.”
Sarrah Hovis, preschool teacher, Roseville, Mich.
“I have more kids in kindergarten who have never been in school.”
Terrance Anfield, kindergarten teacher, Indianapolis
One explanation for young children’s struggles, childhood development experts say, is parental stress during the pandemic.
A baby who is exposed to more stress will show more activation on brain imaging scans in “the parts of that baby’s brain that focus on fear and focus on aggression,” said Rahil D. Briggs, a child psychologist with Zero to Three, a nonprofit that focuses on early childhood. That leaves less energy for parts of the brain focused on language, exploration and learning, she said.
During lockdowns, children also spent less time overhearing adult interactions that exposed them to new language, like at the grocery store or the library. And they spent less time playing with other children.
Kelsey Schnur, 32, of Sharpsville, Pa., pulled her daughter, Finley, from child care during the pandemic. Finley, then a toddler, colored, did puzzles and read books at home.
But when she finally enrolled in preschool, she struggled to adjust, her mother said. She was diagnosed with separation anxiety and selective mutism.
“It was very eye-opening to see,” said Ms. Schnur, who works in early childhood education. “They can have all of the education experiences and knowledge, but that socialization is so key.”
Preschool attendance can significantly boost kindergarten preparedness, research has found. But in many states, preschool attendance is still below prepandemic levels. Survey data suggests low-income families have not returned at the same rate as higher-income families.
“I have never had such a small class,” said Analilia Sanchez, who had nine children in her preschool class in El Paso this year. She typically has at least 16. “I think they got used to having them at home — that fear of being around the other kids, the germs.”
Time on screens also spiked during the pandemic — as parents juggled work and children cooped up at home — and screen time stayed up after lockdowns ended. Many teachers and early childhood experts believe this affected children’s attention spans and fine motor skills. Long periods of screen time have been associated with developmental delays.
Heidi Tringali, a pediatric occupational therapist in Charlotte, N.C., said she and her colleagues are seeing many more families contact them with children who don’t fit into typical diagnoses.
She is seeing “visual problems, core strength, social skills, attention — all the deficits,” she said. “We really see the difference in them not being out playing.”
Can children catch up?
“I’m actually happy with the majority of their growth.”
Michael LoMedico, second-grade teacher, Yonkers, N.Y.
“They just crave consistency that they didn’t get.”
Emily Sampley, substitute teacher, Sioux Falls, S.D.
It’s too early to know whether young children will experience long-term effects from the pandemic, but researchers say there are reasons to be optimistic.
“It is absolutely possible to catch up, if we catch things early,” said Dr. Dani Dumitriu, a pediatrician and neuroscientist at Columbia and chair of the study on pandemic newborns. “There is nothing deterministic about a brain at six months.”
There may also have been benefits to being young in the pandemic, she and others said, like increased resiliency and more time with family.
Some places have invested in programs to support young children, like a Tennessee district that is doubling the number of teaching assistants in kindergarten classrooms next school year and adding a preschool class for students needing extra support.
Oregon used some federal pandemic aid money to start a program to help prepare children and parents for kindergarten the summer before.
For many students, simply being in school is the first step.
Sarrah Hovis, a preschool teacher in Roseville, Mich., has seen plenty of the pandemic’s impact in her classroom. Some children can’t open a bag of chips, because they lack finger strength. More of her students are missing many days of school, a national problem since the pandemic.
But she has also seen great progress. By the end of this year, some of her students were counting to 100, and even adding and subtracting.
“If the kids come to school,” she said, “they do learn.”
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