January 07, 2009

The Scale of Schools

Small schools foster big gains in learning

Article Tools
It was, sadly, the Columbine High killings in suburban Denver in 1999 that may have provided the most dramatic evidence in the case against big schools. In the aftermath, many blamed the violence on Columbine’s immense size—2,000 students—and the powerful cliques that evolve in such an environment. Critics included Al Gore, who blasted the practice of "herding all students into overcrowded, factory-style high schools."

And yet the case for small schools doesn’t rest just on emotional rhetoric and bloody TV footage. Recent studies have shown that simply reducing the size of a school can "create small, supportive learning environments that give students a sense of connection," as Richard Riley, U.S. secretary of education, puts it. And it’s not just a feel-good environment for students. Stacy Mitchell of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, writing in The Progressive Populist (Oct. 1, 2000), reports that students in urban, rural, and suburban small schools (300 to 400 students for elementary schools, 400 to 600 for middle schools, and 400 to 800 for high schools) outdo their big-school peers in grades and test scores, have far fewer discipline problems and lower dropout rates, and log more years in postsecondary education.

Buoyed by these and other findings, the U.S. Department of Education in October awarded grants to 354 schools in 39 states to help create smaller, more personalized "learning communities," including "schools within schools" in large high schools. Meanwhile, state education officials around the country are finally beginning to see the value of the small schools that survived the consolidation trend of recent decades.

All of this elates Deborah Meier, whose pioneer small schools in Harlem helped inspire a boom in New York City—which now boasts more than 100 small schools—and nationwide. "It’s not even their particular approach to curriculum and pedagogy that makes them work," writes Meier in The Nation (June 5, 2000). "It’s that the schools are organized to maximize the power of the adults who know the kids best, the strength of their ties with kids and families, and their ability to put together a coherent schoolwide pedagogy and curriculum." And, she adds, "all of this can happen inside the public sector, without charters, vouchers, or privatization."

Still, Meier doubts that the "bigger is better" ethos that sprang up during the 1950s will soon disappear. From 1940 to 1990, 200,000 schools were consolidated into some 62,000, despite a 70 percent rise in the nation’s population. Average enrollment skyrocketed, and now it’s not uncommon for a single school to house 5,000 students. As Philip Langdon notes in the conservative journal The American Enterprise (Jan. 2000), many educators, parents, and students still believe big schools are better able to offer modern equipment and advanced curriculums.

Page: 1 | 2 | Next >>



Pay Now & Save $7.97!
First Name: *
Last Name: *
Address: *
City: *
State/Province: *
Zip/Postal Code:*
Country:
Email:*
(* indicates a required item)
Canadian subs: 1 year, (includes postage & GST). Foreign subs: 1 year, . U.S. funds.
Canadian Subscribers - Click Here
Non US and Canadian Subscribers - Click Here
 

Want to gain a fresh perspective? Read stories that matter? Feel optimistic about the future? It's all here! Utne Reader offers provocative writing from diverse perspectives, insightful analysis of art and media, down-to-earth news and in-depth coverage of eye-opening issues that affect your life.

Save Even More Money By Paying NOW!

Pay now with a credit card and take advantage of our Earth-Friendly automatic renewal savings plan. You save an additional $7.97 and get 6 issues of Utne Reader for only $12.00 (USA only).

Or Bill Me Later and pay just $19.97 for 6 issues of Utne Reader!