Despite the federal government giving states and school districts billions of dollars to combat student learning loss during the COVID-19 pandemic, student achievement is on the decline across the nation, and the money to solve it may not be enough, especially for places with the greatest needs, according to a new analysis published Tuesday.

While federal emergency relief dollars for schools specifically set aside to address student learning loss totaled about $189 billion, schools needed about $500 billion, the new study from the American Educational Research Association found. 

As great as the need may be for additional resources, the authors of the study are urging the federal government to look at recent national standardized test score results showing declines in student achievement before giving states and districts any more money.

“The magnitude of learning loss in students is so big. We need to address it immediately with the best policy interventions in the use of [Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief] funding to remediate even larger learning loss,” said Matthew P. Steinberg, one of the study’s authors, in an interview, referring to the pandemic aid provided to schools in the last two years. Steinberg is also an associate professor of education and public policy and director of EdPolicyForward at George Mason University Schar School of Policy & Government.

In their analysis, the authors compared federal government spending during the pandemic with its spending during the Great Recession. In both cases, they found that the way the money was distributed and how it was earmarked, or not, for specific uses has been problematic and did not meet intended policy goals. 

“Despite the radically different impacts that the Great Recession and the COVID-19 pandemic have had on US society and on the US K-12 educational system specifically, we can document commonalities in federal policy during these two crises,” wrote Steinberg and his co-author Kenneth Shores, an assistant professor in education and social policy at the University of Delaware College of Education and Human Development, wrote.