OCTOBER 2, 2020 — How do you feel when you’re hungry? Are you at your best? A new study by the UTSA Urban Education Institute found that food insecure students in San Antonio struggled with distance learning and academic engagement more than their peers.
The findings linking food insecurity and learning signify how hunger and larger issues of family instability during the ongoing pandemic threaten student growth.
“It is well understood that we all have basic needs that must be met if we are to pursue and realize our fullest potential,” said Mike Villarreal, UEI director. “It is urgent that we as a community find effective ways to care for and respond to families in crisis so children won’t lag behind their peers in cognitive, emotional, and physical development.”
The research, as part of a multipart “Teaching and Learning In the Time of COVID-19” survey project, found that 26% of local K-12 students and parents surveyed said they were experiencing food insecurity, meaning food ran out and there was no money to buy more.
The UEI spent the spring and summer surveying almost 2,000 K-12 public school students, parents and teachers across eight Bexar County school systems for the overall project. This research is helping local education leaders plan and improve their operations during the pandemic.
Families in each school system reported experiencing food insecurity, with the highest rates of 49% found in Edgewood ISD and 41% in both Harlandale and Southwest ISDs. Other school-district-level data can be found in the report.
Bexar County’s pre-pandemic rates of food insecurity were already hovering at about 14% in 2018. That number nearly doubled for public school families by spring of 2020.
“A majority of our public school children depend on our public schools for food, safety and community,” Villarreal said. “The pandemic not only stranded students, but also caused many of them and their parents (48%) to lose their jobs or suffer pay cuts.”
Schools responded quickly with massive technology and meal distributions for students learning at home.
⇒ Explore the work of the Urban Education Institute at UTSA.
“Despite many obstacles and regulations by the federal government, districts pivoted quickly and offered free meals with little to no questions asked while physical campuses were closed,” Villarreal said. “Their efforts were heroic—and yet there is still more work to be done. Our research is intended to support our school leaders by providing them rigorous and actionable research and nurturing an ongoing community conversation about the challenges and solutions in education.”
Some of the key findings in the research report include:
Food-insecure high school students were also overrepresented among those who said they were never engaged by school lessons.
UTSA Today is produced by University Communications and Marketing, the official news source of The University of Texas at San Antonio. Send your feedback to news@utsa.edu. Keep up-to-date on UTSA news by visiting UTSA Today. Connect with UTSA online at Facebook, Twitter, Youtube and Instagram.
Día en la Sombrilla, formerly Fiesta UTSA, is a festival hosted each spring as a part of Fiesta® San Antonio events. Sponsored by Roadrunner Productions, the event features music, food, confetti, games, event t-shirts, and more.
Sombrilla Plaza, Main CampusCovidence is a systematic & scoping review tool used to streamline the process of screening and reviewing articles. Using this software, research teams can easily import studies, perform automatic deduplication, and extract data using templates. This workshop will show attendees how to start a review in Covidence, add collaborators, and get started on screening.
Virtual (Zoom)In this workshop, attendees will be introduced to Pandas, a Python tool for working with data easily. It makes it simple to organize and analyze information when data is organized and categorized, like spreadsheets or tables.
Group Spot B, John Peace LibraryEach fall and spring semester, students convene at the Main Campus at UTSA with booths, ideas and prototypes. A crowd of judges, local organizations, students, faculty and sponsors walk around and talk to the students about their projects and ask questions. Students get the real-life experience of "pitching" their project with hopes of getting funding or support to move to the next level.
UTSA Convocation Center, Main CampusJoin the doctoral candidates for the Doctoral Conferreal Ceremony and celebrate their accomplishments.
Arts Building Recital Hall, Main CampusCelebrate the graduates from the Carlos Alvarez College of Business, College of Education and Human Development, Margie and Bill Klesse College of Engineering and Integrated Design and University College.
AlamodomeCelebrate the graduates from the College for Health, Community and Policy, College of Liberal and Fine Arts and College of Sciences.
AlamodomeThe University of Texas at San Antonio is dedicated to the advancement of knowledge through research and discovery, teaching and learning, community engagement and public service. As an institution of access and excellence, UTSA embraces multicultural traditions and serves as a center for intellectual and creative resources as well as a catalyst for socioeconomic development and the commercialization of intellectual property - for Texas, the nation and the world.
To be a premier public research university, providing access to educational excellence and preparing citizen leaders for the global environment.
We encourage an environment of dialogue and discovery, where integrity, excellence, respect, collaboration and innovation are fostered.