ARE SMALLER SCHOOLS THE ANSWER?
Big high schools hinder learning, some teachers say
Granholm proposal would cut enrollments to 400
February 18, 2008
BY LORI HIGGINS
FREE PRESS EDUCATION WRITER
Dozens of high schools -- including 43 in metro Detroit -- could be chopped into pieces in coming years as a movement to break their big populations into smaller chunks gains steam in Michigan.
It's a practice already seen from Huron Valley Schools in Oakland County to Chippewa Valley Schools in Macomb County, where school districts are finding ways to turn large, impersonal high schools into smaller communities.
And now Gov. Jennifer Granholm wants the Legislature to endorse a plan she announced last month to create the 21st Century Schools Fund, which would allow schools that enroll more than 800 students and fail to meet goals of the federal No Child Left Behind (NCLB) law for two years or more to create small high schools of 400 students.
But are small schools the answer? Research has been mixed on an increasingly popular way to achieve the small-school effect -- by creating schools within schools -- with many findings showing that simply going smaller is not a panacea.
Yet John Telford, a teacher and curriculum leader at Finney High School in Detroit Public Schools, says he believes it can save urban schools.
"Is this the way to go? There's no question. This is the answer," Telford said.
But he doesn't have to look far to find dissent. Dominique Harris, a Finney junior, is unconvinced. Though Finney would be eligible for the money, she doesn't like the idea of breaking up her school's population of nearly 1,000 students.
"I don't think they should do that. It's not going to change anything. It's just going to make a whole bunch of little schools," with the same problems as the big schools, Dominique said.
And just last year, University of Michigan education professor Valerie E. Lee coauthored a book that tells a cautionary tale about the method of breaking large high schools into schools-within-schools.
"People are grasping at straws," said Lee, who also is a faculty associate with U-M's Survey Research Center. "Schools within schools is seen as the new magic bullet that's going to save large urban high schools. Maybe so. But not in the way that most people are going to do it."
Teaching is the focus
Many school districts in metro Detroit already have invested time and money into creating smaller, more personal high school environments.
Advocates say smaller schools allow students to have better relationships with their teachers, staff to have more support, administrators to have autonomy and the focus to be on discipline and teaching that is relevant to what will matter in the real world.
Southfield Public Schools is opening a new small high school next fall that will focus on math, science, technology and engineering. The district already has five academies at its two high schools -- each with separate themes such as arts and communications, medicine and natural sciences, and engineering and manufacturing -- in an effort to not only expose students to careers but to create smaller learning environments.
Southfield High enrolls 1,400 students, but it doesn't feel that way to Malcolm Hayes, a senior. He's enrolled in the engineering academy, and though he takes core classes such as language arts and math with students from across the school, the rest are with his peers in the academy.
"We share a lot in common," said Malcolm, 17, of Southfield. "We're able to connect more than with students I have in my English classes. We share interests."
At Lakeland High School in White Lake Township, the district created ninth-grade teams several years ago, in which students are divided into groups of about 90 students and paired with three teachers who teach core classes such as math, language arts and science within a three-hour block.
Shannon Schwarb, a Lakeland math teacher, likes sharing the same group of students with her colleagues. If she notices a student struggling, she can talk to her teammates to see if they're noticing the same difficulties.
And with high school graduation standards getting tougher, students need to have better relationships with their teachers, she said.
"That's why the teams are important, because it gives them that extra support. It makes them feel more comfortable."
Lakeland also has divided its school into two sections, with freshmen and sophomores occupying one side of the building and the upper-class students occupying the other side, another effort at creating smaller environments for kids.
The efforts seem to be paying off. Lakeland Principal Bob Behnke said the school's ACT composite scores have increased faster than the state and national averages.
Although Lakeland's ninth-grade teams share a building with older students, Chippewa Valley Schools is taking a different approach. Two ninth-grade academies are opening in September, one adjacent to Dakota High School and the other next to Chippewa Valley High.
Both academies are expected to enroll 600 students, reducing the population at Dakota from 2,500 and Chippewa Valley from 2,200, said Ed Skiba, executive director of secondary education.
"We're trying to create a separate culture that tells kids that we're all in this together," Skiba said.
Making school more personal
The small-school method is working for Jules Cooch of Pinckney, an 18-year-old who attends a small school of 330 students.
"It's one-on-one; it's really personalized. Someone is actually saying to you ... that you matter," said Cooch, a senior at the Washtenaw Technical Middle College, where students can graduate with not only a high school diploma, but a technical certificate or an associate's degree, in four years.
Programs like the one Cooch attends were touted by Granholm as examples of small schools that work.
Fifteen high schools in Detroit and about 28 other schools in Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties would be eligible for the funds Granholm wants to make available, though the priority would be on the nearly two dozen schools with serious academic troubles.
Those pushing for the small schools say they'll keep kids in school and produce graduates who are prepared for postsecondary education, whether that be a 4-year university, community college or trade program.
"If you can make school more personal and have kids have ongoing relationships with teachers in smaller settings, you really tap into their motivation, their willingness to stay in school," said State Superintendent Mike Flanagan.
Contact LORI HIGGINS at 248-351-3694 or lhiggins@freepress.com.
Monday, February 18, 2008
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5 comments:
Folks:
Perhaps a change in the prescribed medicine (curriculum and pedagogy) is in order instead of merely changing the dosage. In other words smaller doses of the wrong thing will not produce the right thing (remedy).
Doctor Jim
I'm posting this comment here because there is no place on your blog for general comments about the blog.
This comment is about the header of your blog. Why do educators, and those determine to save us, run from clear writing? What are "creative and innovative conceptual exectutions that become foundational catalyst's for 21st Century tranformative educational explorations and experiences?" And why are two words misspelled and a possessive misused?
Let me try and make sense of this nonsense. "Creative and innovative" = new? "Conceptual executions" = artistic CIA interrogation techniques? Probably not. How about "ideas put into practice" or simply, to combine the whole mess, "new practices." I've left off "ideas" since you mention it earlier in your statement.
On to "foundational catalyst's for 21st Century tranformative educational explorations and experiences." Something that is foundational is underlying or fundamental. Catalysts are agents that cause change, therefore "transformative" is redundant. It is 2008, so "the 21st Century" is also unnecessary.
Any change you propose, even a return to one-room schoolhouses, will be a 21st century change. Are you talking about new ideas and practices that will bring about fundamental change?
Finally, "educational explorations and experiences." I admire the alliteration, and I'm glad that the explorations and experiences will be educational, but who is going on these explorations and who is leading them? Nowhere in your header do I see any mention of students or teachers. Nowhere is there any place for them in your polysyllabic wonderland. They deserve mention because education is all about learning and teaching, and any change that does not involve them both is meaningless.
Oh, and by the way, "repository" doesn't mean the same thing as "clearinghouse," the word I think you intended. A repository is a secret place where things are locked away, so that no one can find them or use them.
A bit of advice as you sweep into the 21st century curing all education's ills. Start by writing clearly.
Transitioning education from the existing model to a new model requires an intense study of its failure and close scrutiny of the needs of the future. The question becomes, "What is the X factor in the equation that leads to success."
February 19, 2008 11:07 AM
teach313:
Thank you for your constructive comments. Your insights are instructive and greatly appreciated.
We will endeavor to address and reslove the issues you have so kindly identified in a timely fashion.
With that in mind you may find the following blog-site informative regarding our mutual efforts on behalf of the Detroit Public Schools students and teachers. http://www.northwesterndigital.blogspot.com
Additonally, we would love to have you join us as a "VIP Guest" to witness in person several hundred tri-county students and teachers in action at the annual Global Trade Mission 2008 Conference taking place February 28, through March 1, 2008 at Oakland Community College Campus in Auburn Hills.
http://www.automationalley.com/autoalley/Member+Consortium/Education+and+Training/GlobalTradeMission.htm
Finally, we would be glad to have you become an author on this blog-site so this conversation can become more informed and articulate. Your participation would ge greatly welcomed and appreciated.
Best,
Jim
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