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This section contains research pieces, and articles which focus on small schools research. More articles are available in Media. Older Reseach material can be found in the Archived Research Section.

Research shows that small schools can....

Other Related Research

ERIC Digests

More resources are listed in our Bibliography of (off-line) research articles.


RAISE STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT

Two Schools: Two Approaches to Personalized Learning
The authors believe that the kind of vital personalization exemplified at Haney and Parker -- not state testing or rigid standardization -- must become the cornerstone of school renewal if educators and the communities they serve hope to change, in any significant way, the basic grammar of schooling.[03/02]

REDUCE INCIDENTS OF VIOLENCE OR DISRUPTIVE BEHAVIOR

From Center for Rural Affairs : The Case for Small Schools
For most children, smaller schools are better. In that respect, this series of articles advocates not only for small, rural schools, but for all children. As a society we have the opportunity to provide a safer and higher quality of educational experience for our children, and the tragic recent events in America’s schools show the necessity to seize the opportunity. [1/00]

COMBAT STUDENT ANONYMITY AND ISOLATION

From ASCD : Supporting Schools as True Communities of Character - Testimony Before the House Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Youth and Families
"The first and perhaps most critical element needed for effective character education programs is personalization, or human-scale schooling. Smaller classes and smaller schools enable schools to become communities in which teachers and students know and value each other as individuals. Schools within schools, block scheduling, and mentoring programs create more opportunities for knowing and caring for each student." [3/1/00]

INCREASE ATTENDANCE AND GRADUATION RATES

FOOD FOR THOUGHT ON DROPOUTS AND SMALL SCHOOLS
While the study doesn’t break down the schools with “weak promoting power” by size of school, the section reprinted below offers some challenging and provocative analysis of the new small-schools initiatives. --Mike Klonsky [6/04]

From Harvard University - Civil Rights Project: Dropouts In America
Research released Jan. 13 at a conference at Harvard University found that smaller schools, individualized attention, and strong academic intervention— particularly in the 9th grade—appear to improve the odds that students will finish high school. [1/13/01]

ELEVATE TEACHER SATISFACTION

Small Schools Can Make a Difference for Teachers
Small schools, coupled with prepared teachers who have access to expert colleagues and good teaching materials, lead to increased student achievement and lower drop-outs. [02/03]

Harvard Grad School of Education: Pedro Noguera on "No Child Left Behind"
"Research on school violence has shown that a lack of meaningful contact between adults and students in schools prevents school personnel from identifying those students who are at risk of engaging in violence; it also prevents them from knowing when violent incidents are likely to occur."
-- Pedro Noguera. [08/01/02]

IMPROVE SCHOOL CLIMATE

From School of Education, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee : The Ultimate Education Reform? Make Schools Smaller
"Smallness is a prerequisite for the climate of and culture that we need to develop the habits of heart and mind essential to a democracy,” Deborah Meier, principal of Seven Hills School in Boston once said. “Small schools come as close to being a panacea for America’s educational ills as we're likely to get." [12/14/00]

BE MORE COST EFFECTIVE

From AERA Publications : Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis - High School Size : Effects on Budgets and Performance in New York City
This paper contributes to the school size policy debate by using methods and data that combine budget and performance information, with the school as the unit of analysis...We find that small academic and large high schools are similar in terms of budgets per graduate and that some vocational and "transfer" high schools have the highest budgets per graduate. Because the literature on school size indicates that small high schools are more effective for minority and poor students, the similarity in outcomes that small and large high schools produce suggests that policymakers might do well to support the creation of more small high schools. [Spring 2000]

BE AS GOOD OR BETTER THAN BIG SCHOOLS

Research You Can Use: Parents Favor Smaller Schools
Parents whose children attend small high schools were more likely to say that teachers help struggling students (75 percent compared to 48 percent in large schools) and that students speak and write well (67 percent to 47 percent).
[02/03]

Small Schools Work and They're Cost Effective
a new report goes head-to-head with conventional wisdom about economies of scale, proving that smaller schools can be cost-effective, as well. Dollars and Sense: The Cost Effectiveness of Small Schools, released in September 2002, is a collaborative effort of the KnowledgeWorks Foundation, the Rural School and Community Trust, and Concordia, Inc.The publication is also available in PDF format. Click here [03/01/02]

NMSA Middle School Journal: Common Elements of High Performing, High Poverty Middle Schools
As schools face public demands for increased student performance, the daunting task is particularly problematic for schools with high poverty levels. Traditionally, achievement is associated with high parental education and high income, while lower socio-economic status children, often termed at-risk, show lower test scores. [03/01/02]

From Center for Education Research, Analysis, and Innovation: The Ultimate Education Reform? Make Schools Smaller
In large schools, both teachers and students move about the building in anonymity. In a small school, students can be known well. And to be known and acknowledged by other human beings is essential to human psychological well-being and to learning. There^Ňs sound evidence for the quality that small schools offer. A growing body of research shows that small schools can: Raise student achievement, especially for minority and low-income students; Reduce incidents of violence and disruptive behavior; Combat anonymity and isolation and, conversely, increase the sense of belonging; Reduce graffiti on school buildings; Increase attendance and graduation rates; Elevate teacher satisfaction; Improve school climate; Operate cost-effectively; Increase parent and community involvement. [12/14/00]

From Small Schools Project : School Reform and the No-Man's-Land of High School Size
This paper explores how research and practice have shaped the way we think about the proper size of the high school. [12/00]

From Independent Schools of the Central States : Overview of Recent Research on Effectiveness of Small Schools
As this sampling attests, smallness has been interwoven with many of today's reform themes, & with other features & conditions currently recommended for schools. Interest in & examination of small schools appear to be thriving. [12/00]

From Bank Street College : Small Schools: Great Strides - A Study of New Small Schools in Chicago
Small schools are seeing increased student achievement, decreased dropout rates, and lower levels of violence even among the most disadvantaged urban students. Additionally, small schools increase parent, community, teacher, and principal satisfaction with their schools. These findings are based on a two-year study of Chicago's small schools, a strategy that other urban centers, Boston, Philadelphia, and New York among others, have underway. This Bank Street College study focuses on small Chicago schools founded between 1990 and 1997 and tracks their progress through 1999. [6/00]

From Annie E. Casey Foundation : Success in School: Education Ideas that Count - Small Schools
Improving the quality of education by creating small schools has become an increasingly popular solution to the failure of jumbo schools in cities such as Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, and Seattle.[4/00]

From Educational Design Institute: Thirty-three Educational Design Principals for Schools and Community Learning Centers
The research community has known for some time that small schools (100-150), in comparison with large schools (over 2,000) offer students greater opportunities to participate in extracurricular activities and to exercise leadership roles. In particular, participation in school activities, student satisfaction, number of classes taken, community employment, and participation in social organizations have all been found to be greater in small schools relative to large schools. In addition, small schools, on the order of 500 or less, have lower incidence of crime levels and less serious student misconduct. [1/31/00]

OTHER RELATED RESEARCH

Jeremy,
You asked about research on small schools and dropouts. Here are some good sources. Please visit Kathleen Cotton's research, review of 10 studies from 1996: "School Size, School Climate, and Student Performance" http://www.nwrel.org/scpd/sirs/10/c020.html (excerpt below). I would also look at the ECS review, The Progress of Education Reform 1999-2002 School Size Vol. 3, No. 3, January-February, 2002 http://www.ecs.org/clearinghouse/34/31/3431.pdf
Mike Klonsky

Boston Review: Why Schools Work & the Problem with Vouchers.
Are vouchers a tool to lift poor children out of failing schools, or are poor children a tool to lift schools out of the public sector? [11/03]

EDWEEK: SMALL SCHOOLS HARD TO START, REPORT FINDS
Research shows road to school reform is ‘long and bumpy. [04/28/03]

Catalyst: Jennifer O'Day's study of probation in Chicago
In her view, the most promising accountability systems are those that tap into teachers intrinsic motivation by building collegiality around improved student learning. In Baltimore City Public Schools, for instance, consultants work with a group of low-performing schools on team building and analyzing student work, among other practices, she says. [04/10/03]

Jobs for the Future Newswire #17 OCTOBER 9, 2002
FROM: JOBS FOR THE FUTURE
Creating Strategies for Educational and Economic Opportunity
NEWSWIRE #17, October 9, 2002
[10/09/02]

Journal of Curriculum & Supervision: ON COMMUNITY
Our society and especially our schools need increased clarity of understanding about community, especially in these times. Consideration of the nature of community certainly can aid the pursuit of enhanced educational quality. Moreover, that prospect must not be a fad.Fall 2002, Volume 18, Number 1, 1 3 [10/02]

Black World Today: Still Separate And Unequal
According to exhaustive reports produced by John Logan and colleagues at the Lewis Mumford Center, "the average white person in metropolitan America lives in a neighborhood that is 80% white and only 7% black." A "typical black individual," they find, "lives in a neighborhood that is only 33% white and as much as 51% black. Residential segregation remains high in cities and suburbs around the country." [08/09/02]

New Study on High Schools Ignores Small Schools
I read with amazement the latest study on high schools (see below) done by the National Alliance on the American High School. After plowing through 50 pages of data, information and recommendations for policy makers, I found hardly a mention of the affects of school size or of small schools anywhere. This, even though the Alliance includes small schools advocates such as NASSP, Cross-City Campaign, the Gates Foundation and Jobs for the Future. What's up with that? ....Mike Klonsky [08/08/02]

From ERIC : The Role of Teachers in Urban School Reform
Teachers who share a vision that large-scale fundamental changes in school structure and classroom practice are necessary to improve student outcomes are likely to support implementation of a model, as are those who see implementation of a model as a major and permanent initiative, instead of just another passing reform. [7/00]

From National Center for Education Statistics : Digest of Education Statistics 1999
The Digest provides statistical information covering the field of education from prekindergarten through graduate school with over 450 tables and figures. Topics include: schools and colleges; teachers; enrollments; graduates; educational attainment; finances; federal funds for education; employment and income of graduates; libraries; technology; and international comparisons. [5/6/00]

From U.S. Department of Education, Office of Educational Research and Improvement : The State of Charter Schools 2000, Fourth-Year Report
Most charter schools are small schools - the median enrollment in all charter school sites is 137 students per school, whereas all public schools in the charter states had a median enrollment of about 475 students. [1/00]

From GMS Partners: The Challenge of Change
Before you dive into one more article on whole school reform, organizational change, restructuring, redesigning, and reinventing your school, take a deep breath. Congratulate yourself for being a school leader who has been entrusted with the mission of leading your school and community through a time of unprecedented change in the culture of American education. Ever since 1983, and the ground breaking “A Nation At Risk” report that focused on the poor performance of American students in international comparisons, and the continued gaps between poor and minority students and white students, our educational system has been in a state critical transformation. The result has been a national discussion around vouchers and schools of choice, coupled with Federal and State initiatives focused on school-to-careers, and the birth of the skills standards movement. [2000]

ERIC Digests

Small Schools and Teacher Professional Development. ERIC Digest.
M. Klonsky (2002), EDO-RC-02-6

Balance Due: Increasing Financial Resources for Small Rural Schools. ERIC Digest.
T. Haas (2000), EDO-RC-00-2

Breaking Up Large High Schools: Five Common (and Understandable) Errors of Execution. ERIC Digest.
T. Gregory (2001), EDO-RC-01-6

Current Literature on Small Schools. ERIC Digest.
Mary Anne Raywid (1999), EDO-RC-98-8

Research About School Size and School Performance in Impoverished Communities. ERIC Digest.
C. Howley, M. Strange, & R. Bickel (2000), EDO-RC-00-10

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