Ashley Gaynor, first grade teacher at Oliver Elementary School, teaches math during an intersession class.

Education-focused non-profit news organization The 74 highlighted Birmingham City Schools for the district’s recovery of learning loss due to the pandemic.

The story notes that Birmingham City Schools has ā€œoutpaced the state in math recovery after the pandemic,ā€ citing a 2024 case study by Curriculum Associates as well as a study by the Educational Opportunity Project at Stanford University, the latter of which initially garnered national media attention for the district.

A chart from Curriculum Associates shows that the change in percentage proficient from 2022 to 2023 in ACAP scores for math  was greater for Birmingham City Schools third, fifth, and seventh-grade students that the rest of the state.

BCS Superintendent Dr. Mark Sullivan credits intersessions, optional instructional weeks scheduled after each grading period, as a crucial strategy for making up for lost learning. 

ā€œI told the teachers, ā€˜You [will] have to teach like you’ve never taught before,’ meaning that we had to make up multiple grades within a year because of unfinished learning,ā€ he told reporter Linda Jacobson of The 74.  

In addition, Ashley Gaynor, a first grade teacher at Oliver Elementary School, appeared in the cover photo for the story. In the picture, she is teaching a class during intersession. 

Read the full story at The 74 website.