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New Poll Shows Americans’ Thoughts on the Quality of K-12 Education

AP Photo/Ron Harris

Townhall has covered how polls have shown Americans' concerns about what children are learning in school and the quality of education they've received since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. A federal report showed that children suffered immense learning loss in subjects like math due to lockdowns. This week, a new poll found Americans' overall satisfaction levels with K-12 education in the United States is at a record low. 

Gallup’s latest Work and Education survey, taken annually, was released Thursday. It was conducted from Aug. 1 through 23. 

According to the findings, Americans’ satisfaction with the quality of K-12 education in the U.S. has fallen six percentage points in the past year to match the record-low rating of 36 percent. Gallup has tracked this figure annually for 24 years.

When K-12 parents were surveyed, 76 percent said they were satisfied with their oldest child’s education. Ten years ago, this figure was 67 percent (via Gallup):

Since 1999, when Gallup started asking these two questions every August, there has been a consistent, significant gap between parents' satisfaction with their child's education and Americans’ views of U.S. education in general, averaging 31 percentage points.

The latest readings, from an Aug. 1-23 poll, find that Americans’ overall satisfaction with the nation’s K-12 education quality is nine points below the 45% historical average for this metric. At the same time, parents’ satisfaction with the quality of their school-aged child’s education matches the historical average for the measure.

All told, 35% of parents of K-12 students are “completely satisfied” with their child’s education, 41% are “somewhat satisfied,” 12% are “somewhat dissatisfied” and 9% “completely dissatisfied.” Meanwhile, 8% of Americans are completely satisfied with K-12 education nationally, 28% are somewhat satisfied, 38% somewhat dissatisfied and 25% completely dissatisfied.

"Americans’ satisfaction with the quality of K-12 education in the U.S. has fallen to a record low point as a new school year begins. Both party groups are at or near record-low satisfaction levels, but Republicans are significantly less likely to be satisfied than Democrats are," Gallup's write-up noted.

Additionally, the poll from Gallup found that 38 percent of parents say they fear for their child’s safety ahead of the 2023-2024 school year. Last year, this figure was 44 percent. The highest measured by Gallup was 55 percent, right after the 1999 Columbine High School shooting.

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