FILE - Buses wait outside a high school in Greenlawn, New York, at the end of the first day of school, on Sept. 8, 2020. (Photo by Steve Pfost/Newsday RM via Getty Images) She’d be a senior right now, preparing for graduation in a few months, probably leading her school’s modern dance troupe and taking art classes.Instead, Kailani Taylor-Cribb hasn’t taken a single class in what used to be her high school since the height of the coronavirus pandemic.
She vanished from Cambridge, Massachusetts’ public school roll in 2021 and has been, from an administrative standpoint, unaccounted for since then.She is among hundreds of thousands of students around the country who disappeared from public schools during the pandemic and didn’t resume their studies elsewhere.An analysis by The Associated Press, Stanford University’s Big Local News project and Stanford education professor Thomas Dee found an estimated 230,000 students in 21 states whose absences could not be accounted for.
These students didn’t move out of state, and they didn’t sign up for private school or home-school, according to publicly available data.In short, they’re missing."Missing" students received crisis-level attention in 2020 after the pandemic closed schools nationwide.