October 2025: School Administrator

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Editor's Note
A Health Check on Tutoring

As public schools emerged from the ill effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, many turned to intensive tutoring programs to address the flagging academic needs of students.

Now, about five years on, some districts having realized significant recovery gains continue to provide the neediest students with high-dosage tutoring. Yet without the federal funds of the first few post-pandemic years, some had to drop their tutoring programs or scale back sharply on the numbers being served.

This issue examines what formal research, led by Amanda Neitzel of Johns Hopkins University, has to say about the impact of student tutoring, particularly delivered virtually. Liz Cohen also contributes important writing that draws on her 2025 book The Future of Tutoring: Lessons from 10,000 School District Tutoring Initiatives.

We’re also sharing the experiences of school system leaders in Massachusetts and Texas on what they’ve seen as beneficial about their tutoring initiatives.

As always, we welcome reader feedback, whether in support or disagreement, about anything published in this issue.

Jay P. Goldman
Editor, School Administrator
 703-875-0745
 jgoldman@aasa.org
 

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