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Research Literature
New Small Learning
Communities: Findings From Recent Literature
Kathleen
Cotton was a Research Associate in the School Improvement Program at
the Northwest Regional Educational
Laboratory . She wrote what is described as a "ground breaking"
study of small
schools in 1996. These quotes are taken directly from her 2001 review
of the literature and are grouped by theme: Outcomes ; Size
; Curriculum ; Grouping
Outcomes
Wasley, et al.
(2000) ... provide more detail: We believe…that smaller school size
can facilitate leaders' abilities to lead a school to improved performance
and teachers' abilities to build student skill and knowledge in important
ways….It is important to avoid seeing small schools as the sole
solution to all that ails education. Rather, we would suggest that it
is a key ingredient in a comprehensive plan to improve education. Researchers
who have studied small schools have stressed that reducing school size
alone does not necessarily lead to improved student outcomes. Instead,
they have concluded that school size should be seen as having an indirect effect on student learning…school
size acts as a facilitating factor for other desirable practices. In other
words, school characteristics that tend to promote increased student learning--such
as collegiality among teachers, personalized teacher-student relationships,
and less differentiation of instruction by ability--are simply easier
to implement in small schools. (pp. 5-6)
The outcomes typically produced
by SLCs, in contrast to large schools, include:
- Higher achievement
- Reduction of the
negative effects of poverty on achievement
- Increased student
affiliation with their school community
- Greater safety
and order
- Much less truancy
and many fewer dropouts
- Similar college
entrance exam scores, acceptance rates, GPAs, and completion
- Higher levels of
extracurricular participation in traditional small schools; role of
extracurricular participation differs across SLCs
- Higher levels of
parent and community involvement and greater satisfaction
- More positive teacher
attitudes and satisfaction
- Comparable core
curricula
- Lower costs
per student graduated (p. 50)
In the popular
press, articles informing readers about the impressive benefits of small
schools continue to be written and read, but for many people in and outside
the education profession, this is old news. Research conducted over the
past 15 years has convincingly demonstrated that small schools are superior
to large ones on many measures and equal to them on the rest (Raywid,
1996; Cotton 1996). Indeed, noted small school researcher Mary Anne Raywid
(1999) has written that the superiority of small schools has been established
"with a clarity and at a level of confidence rare in the annals of education
research" These findings, together with strong evidence that smaller schools
can narrow the achievement gap between white/middle class/affluent students
and ethnic minority and poor students has led to the creation of hundreds
of small schools in large cities around the U.S., including Chicago, Denver,
Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, Seattle and others. (p. 1)
The fact that
these mostly poor, mostly ethnic minority children have notably higher
achievement in small learning environments is extremely encouraging to
those who have previously searched in vain for an educational approach
that could narrow the "achievement gap" between these students and their
white and higher-SES peers. And the effect is not only well documented,
but also sizeable--"remarkably strong and consistent from state to state,"
(p. 14) top
Size
Looking at size,
for example, many of the writers whose work I consulted offer opinions
about the proper size for a small high school. A few put the maximum at
500 students, but most assert that an upward limit of 400 is best. Others
note that the size of the most successful small urban high schools is
smaller still, with enrollments closer to 200 than 400. (p. 7)
Barriers and Pitfalls: Still too large . Wasley and Lear are among the
growing chorus of experts who argue that "so-called small schools aren't
small enough"; that the optimal size for a small school is "closer to
200 than to 400 students". And once schools get over 400 students, they
argue, they begin to lose their personalization and focus. Gregory (2000)
concurs: A size of 400 or 500 makes sense only if one's intent is to conduct
business as usual, a routine of textbook-dominated classes that are designed
to dispense a curriculum that emphasizes the transmission of information
from the old to the young via group instruction delivered within the confines
of the school building. (p. 43) top
Curriculum
An argument sometimes
advanced against small schools is that their curriculum is inferior to
that of large schools. Critics declare that more students means more staff
and a greater variety of curricular offerings, which in turn will meet
individual student needs and provide them better preparation for college
or other postsecondary plans. While that line of thinking seems reasonable
enough, the research findings do not bear it out. For one thing, according
to Roellke's 1996 research summary on curriculum adequacy and quality,
"researchers have found…that core curricular offerings in small
high school settings overall are well aligned with national goals." (p.
18)
Haller, et al.
(1990), having made a similar discovery, challenge the argument for school
consolidation on grounds of curriculum adequacy. "Perhaps we are obtuse,"
they write, "but why the state should have an overriding interest in consolidating
schools so that a few students are able to study calculus, physics, and
a fourth year of German--to say nothing of rock poetry--eludes us." (p.
18)
Instead of being
a deficit, the inability of small schools to differentiate students by
offering a diverse curriculum seems to be an advantage. It forces small
schools to teach a core academic curriculum in heterogeneous classes--and
this factor is associated with a higher and more equitable level of achievement
among students." (p. 19) top
Grouping, etc.
Many researchers,
external service providers and experienced small-school practitioners
tell us that the positive achievement and very positive equity results
they see are due largely to the fact that the schools with which they
are involved do not practice academic tracking. For a long time researchers
have been reporting that minority and poor young people are overrepresented
in low tracks in conventional large high schools. They have also found
that the learning content and methods offered to lowtrack classes are
typically far less stimulating to students than those of higher-track
classes. Researchers and practitioners have also known for many years
that, ordinarily, once placed in a given track, a student's fate is sealed:
the system is not sensitive to changes in students' intellectual development
and does not review placements for appropriateness. Probably for the foregoing
reasons, research has been reporting for decades that placement in a low
or "average" track has a negative impact on students' academic performance
and self-concepts--and that tracking confers few benefits even for those
in high tracks. .... Small school practitioners, however, have found that
heterogeneous groups of students--those that large high schools do not
seem to be able to serve effectively--can be accommodated and educated
productively in small learning environments. After spending considerable
time "in the trenches," Mohr observes that, "Many effective small schools
are organized in heterogeneous groupings within which individual needs
are met….Teachers can begin to learn how to meet multiple needs
of students with multiple abilities through the use of groups, anecdotal
evaluations, and individual conferences. This means knowing students in
a way that is much more thorough and much more personal than is possible
in large high schools…." (2000, 150)(pp. 29-30)
Indeed, Howley,
Strange and Bickel (2000) write that " providing smaller schools in very
affluent communities could well prove to be counterproductive in terms
of achievement" (p. 1)
Nearly every report
consulted in preparation for this paper mentions the key role of parents
in these small school communities. Among the characteristics of successful
SLCs with which the Washington Small Schools Project works, is that "they
view parents as critical allies, and find significant ways to include
them in the life of the school community" (p. 32) top
This project provides
support and assistance to K-12 schools in Washington State and nationally
that have received reinvention grants from the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation. The Project is part of the College of Education at the University
of Washington
Successful small
schools provide rigorous and relevant learning experiences for every
student. In small schools, students with diverse abilities and needs
learn together in heterogeneous classes. In order to ensure each student''s
success, teachers must create a more personalized class environment
and adapt their classroom practice to meet the needs of diverse learners.
top
Rethinking
High School - a report that examines five charter schools, amongst
the points made in this report were the importance of students self-selecting
to be in the small schools, the schools had strong and rigorous curricula
with higher level coursework (AP, honors, college level, etc.) available
to all students. If you have trouble getting the report to download,
you can start here
on the Gates Foundation website.
The Education
and Society Program of the Aspen Institute provides a forum and leadership
development for education leaders—government officials, researchers,
funders, school and college administrators and practitioners—to
engage in focused discussions regarding their efforts to improve student
achievement, and to consider how public policies affect their progress.
Past Aspen workshops have contributed to the movement for academic standards,
reconsideration of the democratic purposes of schooling, as well as exploration
of the relationship of education to the community and the economy. Since
1999, the Program’s primary focus has been on the need to transform
America’s high schools, particularly those in urban centers serving
large numbers of students of color. A 2002 Aspen report concluded that
high schools are “pathways to nowhere” for many students,
and that we are experiencing a crisis that “can’t be solved
simply by trying to push a larger number of students through the same
pipeline that now works for only a portion of them.”
The statements below
are taken from several of the Institute's recent publications.
Transforming the American High School
To help all students
reach common, high standards, the one-size-fits-all approach of today’s
high school must yield to a system that presumes students will learn through
different pedagogies, institutional arrangements, and amounts of time.The
current education system, including high schools, provides students with
a constant amount of time and a single approach for learning—and
produces unacceptably large variations in student performance.The only
way to get all students up to common, high performance standards is to
flip this formulation on its head.We must provide students with
multiple learning options and pathways and varied lengths of time to complete
high school and gain the skills necessary to enter postsecondary education
without remediation.
emphasis added(p.
6)
High schools that
make a difference in young people’s lives are connected to their
communities—to employers, postsecondary institutions, and community-
based organizations—and learning takes place in the context of the
entire community, not just the school.A generation of resiliency studies
that look at young people who have “beaten the odds,” as well
as emerging research on small schools and program evaluations on prevention
of risk behaviors such as teen pregnancy, substance abuse, youth violence,
and dropping out of school, all point to a core set of essential supports
and opportunities that motivate young people to work hard, achieve at
high levels, and develop the knowledge, skills, and orientations necessary
for later success... (p. 5)
The Five Cs: Essential Supports and Opportunities
Jobs for the Future’s
From the Margins to the Mainstream initiative has codified the essential
supports and opportunities young people need in order to become productive
adults as the Five Cs :
- Caring relationships that help young people build an attachment
to he learning environment and provide them with the support they
need to overcome obstacles;
- Cognitive challenges that engage young people intellectually and
help them to develop the competencies they will need for postsecondary
success;
- Culture of support for effort that pushes young people to do their
best work;
- Community membership and voice in a group young people feel is worth
belonging to; and
- Connections to high-quality postsecondary learning and career opportunities
through an expanding network of adults. (p.5)
Growing empirical
evidence suggests that small high schools generally have higher achievement
levels, higher graduation and lower dropout rates, and are
safer than larger
high schools (see Raywid 1996; Gladden 1998; Lee 2000).2 Further, the
benefits of small size are greatest for students in schools with high
minority and/or
low-income enrollments (Lee and Smith 1997), particularly in urban communities.
Small size is not a silver bullet, but it can be an important
lever for bringing
about a related set of changes that together produce significant results.
(pp. 5-6) top
Review
of Selected High School Reform Strategies
In regards to
equity, Gladden cites consistent findings that smaller school size predicts
higher academic achievement among minority and low-income students.
Smaller school size also appears
to have the potential to reduce achievement gaps between students of different
racial or socioeconomic backgrounds. Lee and Smith (1997) find that students
learn more in smaller schools (high schools ranging from 600-900 students),
that learning is more equitably distributed in smaller schools, and that
the effects of reduced school size on learning are strongest in schools
with higher proportions of minority and low SES students. (p. 6) top
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