Aaron Metz
Consolidation leads to cruel schools
Friday November 10, 2000
Back to Gazette Online
Our state Department of Education strongly promotes school consolidation because of "economies of scale."
But I have piles of evidence on my desk showing that consolidation undercuts hope of achieving higher test scores. In other words, it is pretty much proven scientifically: Consolidate and test scores fall.
Education Week magazine reported on 150 small schools
In the frenzy to consolidate, as Tara Tuckwiller reported, the small Hannan rural school in
Likewise, researchers find that small schools help students overcome the effects of poverty. Craig Howley of
Harden Elementary in
Smaller schools, smaller classes, is what many parents and teachers have been saying for years. A
Times change. On my first day of school, I cried while the teacher held me in my seat as my mother started walking home. I wasn't too upset though, because I was going to run home at recess.
Now with consolidation, mothers put their tiny tikes on a big yellow bus full of absolute strangers. The first day of school can be very cruel and can leave lasting impressions. That mother may cry too as the big bus vanishes from her view. And her little one doesn't have the options I had on my first day at school.
And so on. The Putnam County Board of Education recently approved a $90 million school facilities plan that includes consolidation of Poca and
In the
School consolidation prepares students for prison. Twelve-year-old Sarah Lusk is smart enough to know that consolidation can be cruel. She writes in the Gazette, "I feel very strongly against the consolidation plan. I believe the bigger the school is, the more violence there will be. Sometimes I feel as if the adults don't think this thing through all the way and at times like this, the kids are smarter ... We truly don't want it to work, so we are going to work our hardest to make sure it doesn't." (Sarah earned an A-plus in civics.)
Most every small school has one or two more-or-less violence-prone students, probably from dysfunctional homes. Consolidation brings them together. And there just might be a Hitler-type among them who has a natural, innate urge to lead a gang. Don't be surprised if they add more than expense and frustration to the educational institution.
"A study by the New Jersey Boards Association found that size was the most important predictor of school violence, " crime expert F.A. Fox said. "The most effective strategy for preventing school violence is to limit school size."
The consolidation of
It is all over.
Consolidation can be cruel. As a lady in Eleanor said: "Many people don't understand what the school means to the small town of
Consolidation can be cruel - and where is the evidence for "economies of scale"?
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