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SchoolSpring » size of schools

No child left behind… in the United States of… Finland? What happened to America?

The American educational system is based on fair and equal educational gain among all students in the classroom. It is thought that by changing classrooms each year, a student will progress further.  It is also thought that this system will enhance a child’s way of learning by being surrounded among a variety of students each year with various skills and strengths. This however, is not the belief in Finland, where the curriculum is relaxed, children are honored among classmates for their academic strengths and helped with their weaknesses in the same classroom. Finnish children grow together, in the same classroom, with the same teacher for the first 5-7 years of their education while many American schools tend to separate students with weakness from the stronger students in specific subjects like reading, … Read entire article »

Filed under: curriculum, Future of Education, size of schools, Teacher motivation, Teacher skills

Small High Schools – The “Silver Bullet”?

A year ago, Diane Ravitch presented a pretty clear and almost scathing explanation of why the Bill and Melissa Gates Foundation-sponsored small high schools initiative failed miserably.  Back in 2000, the Foundation thought it had found the “silver bullet” that would fix high schools with one fell swoop – make them smaller. After investing over $2 billion in 2,600 new small high schools, the Foundation concluded in November, 2008, that small schools were not the answer.  As Ravitch argued, the Foundation was mistaken in believing that the size of the school would answer the challenge of serving students who “are poor, have limited English language proficiency, and are more likely to require special education.” No doubt, Ravitch is correct in acknowledging the breadth and depth of factors that increase or diminish … Read entire article »

Filed under: high school, Rick Detwiler, size of schools

Small High Schools – The "Silver Bullet"?

A year ago, Diane Ravitch presented a pretty clear and almost scathing explanation of why the Bill and Melissa Gates Foundation-sponsored small high schools initiative failed miserably.  Back in 2000, the Foundation thought it had found the “silver bullet” that would fix high schools with one fell swoop – make them smaller. After investing over $2 billion in 2,600 new small high schools, the Foundation concluded in November, 2008, that small schools were not the answer.  As Ravitch argued, the Foundation was mistaken in believing that the size of the school would answer the challenge of serving students who “are poor, have limited English language proficiency, and are more likely to require special education.” No doubt, Ravitch is correct in acknowledging the breadth and depth of factors that increase or diminish … Read entire article »

Filed under: high school, Rick Detwiler, size of schools