Posts Tagged ‘Classroom size’

Reducing Class Size: Not So Cut and Dry

Thursday, December 30th, 2010

Class sizes are booming across the country, but not everybody agrees that obese classrooms are a bad thing.

According to Education Week (www.edweek.org), the average number of students per classroom is inching its way up as school districts struggle to deal with their budget woes.

From the 1980s until 2008, the ratio of students per teacher fell from 17.6 to 15.8 students per public school teacher. Those numbers are misleading, however. They include special education and other classes that typically have fewer students. That skews the numbers down. A better estimate given by the U.S. Department of Education is that current class sizes average about 25 students per teacher. That number will probably be rising in the near future.

The conventional wisdom is that large class sizes are a bad thing and small class sizes are good. That wisdom is supported by some studies. However, the way schools implement class size reductions plays a large role in whether education is improved. For instance, a school may cut class sizes down by one or two students. But one of the main studies supporting the idea of lowering class sizes used classrooms of 13 to 17 students. Cutting one or two children from a 25-student class would hardly be enough. Plus there are schools in high performing nations that sometimes have class sizes greater than in American schools. Smaller class sizes are good, but they are not everything. And schools have to weigh the cost of shrinking classes to the benefits gained. As it turns out, cutting classroom size is one of the most expensive ways of improving a classroom.

Some schools are experimenting with classrooms that far exceed the national average. The New American Academy in New York City has classes of 60 students with four teachers. The school manages to save money and still get the job done. Still other schools use novel approaches like having teachers also run school administration, thus freeing up manpower to teach classes and reduce class size.

What it comes down to is this: Smaller class sizes are probably better, but they aren’t the only answer. And with the economy the way it is, reducing class sizes may not be the most feasible way of improving education. That doesn’t mean that schools shouldn’t look for ways to reduce class sizes; they should. But class size shouldn’t be the main arbiter of perceived school quality. Improving school education is more complicated than just saying, “Reduce, reduce, reduce.”

Check out the Education Week article to get a more detailed look at the issue.

Almost Good News in Prince William County

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

There was a time that Prince William County schools faced a possible cut of more than 700 jobs in its fiscal 2011 budget. Gradually that number was whittled down until it finally reached zero. That was great news. The school system went from calamity to calm relatively quickly and restored peace of mind to parents, students, and schools’ staff.

Of course, that great news simply meant that the status quo was maintained. But recently, Prince William County schools became hopeful that they might actually get extra staff thanks to federal stimulus funds. With those funds, the school system could have hired 180 extra teachers for its classrooms.

That was all thanks to the U.S. Congress, which recently decided to make 10 billion extra federal stimulus dollars available for education jobs across the country. Virginia will get about $249.5 million of that.

It was up to the Prince William Board of County Supervisors to make the final decision on the new jobs. And it did. The supervisors decided not to use the stimulus funds this fiscal year and instead to reconsider them next time.

To read about this, go here.

The use of stimulus funds is a complicated topic. In this case, the funds would have lasted only for a year. After that, the school system would have had to come up with the money to keep any new jobs. Something similar happened when Prince William County schools decided in 2009 to give a raise to school system employees beginning in fiscal 2010. The raises were made possible by federal stimulus funds that would last for only two years – 2010 and 2011. After that, county taxpayers will be footing the bill. Some county supervisors were skeptical of the move back then and have apparently retained that attitude this time around.

Ultimately, the current crop of stimulus funds may cost the county money. But it’s hard to deny that the extra money would benefit the students in Prince William, at least in the short term. The fewer teachers there are the more students each individual teacher must instruct. We all know that students learn better in smaller classes. So, it’s reasonable to assume that having 180 new teachers would mean smaller classrooms and better education to a certain extent.

Regardless, until the supervisors reconsider the funds for fiscal 2012, the discussion is moot.

In the meantime, county officials and taxpayers must think about which is more important: saving money or educating students? That may seem like an easy question to answer, but it’s not. More money in one place means less money elsewhere, so someone will suffer for the sake of better education. Everybody must understand who will suffer, how much they will suffer, and how much schools will benefit before stimulus funds should be used. Everybody has an extra year to think about it.

Schools Bursting at the Seams

Friday, August 27th, 2010

The degenerative disease of school overcrowding continues to spread across the country, inflicting damage on the ability of students to learn and administrators to keep order.

Unfortunately, Virginia has no cure, and so we, too, must suffer the symptoms.

Researchers at the University of Virginia say that the state can expect swelling enrollment in public schools during the next five years. That is in addition to the record number of students already attending. Our current numbers have their positive aspects — in 2009-10, a record 88,624 high school graduates are expected, and getting educated adults out into the population is good by any standard. However, graduation rates are expected to hit their high in the 2011-2012 school year and then start declining.

Meanwhile, large school enrollment without accompanying growth in infrastructure means overcrowding — something nobody likes. We have all witnessed the results: trailers, large classroom sizes, less personal attention for students and children being lost in the crowd.

News of the expected increase in enrollment over the next five years is particularly bad for Northern Virginia because our jurisdictions are the ones expected to be hardest hit by the growth. Fairfax, Prince William and Loudoun counties will make up 85 percent of the increase across the state. In fact, in other parts of the state, enrollment will actually decrease.

So, what does all of this mean for the three most affected counties? We need more schools and more teachers. Sadly, this is the absolute worst time for such necessities. Financial worries have led jurisdictions across the country to slash budgets, including those for education. But there is no doubt that regardless of economic woes, accommodations will have to be made for extra students.

Prince William County is busy building four new schools — two elementary, one middle and a high school. Local officials recognize that the county is in something of a unique situation and that action needed to be taken.

“We are definitely building at a rapid pace,” said Lionel White, supervisor of planning for the Prince William County school system. “Given the state of the economy, a lot of school systems’ growth is flat or they are losing schools. People, though, are coming here, buying homes. . . . We’re a little atypical compared to the rest of the state.”

Loudon and Fairfax are in the same boat, and all three jurisdictions need to recognize that for the next five years, expectations will be on them to satisfy the demands of a growing student marketplace.

To read a press release about the University of Virginia Study, go to UVA’s website.

To read more about the new schools coming to Prince William County, click here.