This article was originally published in the May 19, 1999 edition of the Los Angeles Times
© 1999 Los Angeles Times

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Smaller Schools Called Antidote to Alienation
By MARTHA GROVES Times Education Writer
Ask 11th-graders at Elizabeth Learning Center what they like about
their school and they fire off a barrage of answers: "The teachers are
our friends." "We feel secure." "Each individual gets lots of attention."
"It feels like a big family." "Everybody knows everybody else."
If that sounds like the rosy assessment of a group of privileged
preppies, consider this: The high school is in a down-at-the-heels Latino
neighborhood in Cudahy, 11 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles.
And it is thriving--primarily, students and teachers say, because it
has just 550 students, dinky by the standards of Los Angeles Unified and
most other school districts.
In the month since the Littleton, Colo., shooting tragedy, big urban
and suburban schools--like the two dozen 3,000- and 4,000-pupil behemoths
that dot the Southern California landscape--have been coming under fire.
Touted a generation ago as low-cost solutions to mounting student
populations, mega-schools are being scrutinized anew by researchers and
educators. Increasingly, many conclude that they are breeding grounds for
violence, dropouts, academic mediocrity and the sort of alienation that
is widely believed to have led to the massacre at Columbine High School
near Denver.
Speaking in southern Iowa on Sunday, Vice President Al Gore called for
reducing the size of high schools as one of many ways to improve the
nation's troubled education system.
"When you hear responsible adults saying they had no clue there was a
Trench Coat Mafia or plans to bomb a building . . . it tells you that
even in our middle-class suburbs there's a disconnection [between adults
and kids]," said Michael Klonsky, director of the Small Schools Workshop
at the University of Illinois at Chicago. "One reason is impersonal big
schools."
Many educators say the evidence in favor of smallness is ample and
compelling. Research shows that students, particularly inner-city
children, learn more and better in small schools. They are more
satisfied, and fewer drop out than from large schools.
Small schools also report better attendance and more participation in
extracurricular activities. They experience fewer problems with
discipline, teenage pregnancy and gangs.
Nation's Schools Keep Getting Bigger
Though there is no clear agreement about where "small" leaves off and
"large" begins, many researchers say that an optimum size is 350 for an
elementary school and 400 to 800 for a secondary school.
Yet schools keep getting bigger. Between 1940 and 1990, the total
number of elementary and secondary public schools nationwide plummeted
69%--to 62,037 from about 200,000--despite a 70% rise in U.S. population.
As a result, the average school enrollment rose more than five times, to
653.
New York City and Los Angeles, the nation's two largest school
districts, have many schools with enrollments of close to 5,000. Under
construction in downtown Los Angeles is the Belmont Learning Complex,
with an overall planned enrollment of about 4,800. The school's
year-round schedule ensures that at any given time no more than 3,200
students will be on campus.
The school's current price tag is $175 million, including unforeseen
costs to deal with contamination at the site, and district officials warn
that the figure could rise.
Derided by some as a "Taj Mahal," the school nonetheless has a staunch
defender in Principal Augustine Herrera. Though the enrollment is huge,
he said, his goal is to "make small out of large" by dividing the school
into four "houses" of 800 students each, with the houses in separate
buildings connected by pedestrian bridges. Within each house would be two
or three "academies," or targeted learning programs that would steer
students along a particular career path.
For example, in House I, arts and humanities, students could select
one of three academies: visual arts, performing arts or multimedia.
Students from all houses would come together for certain core classes,
such as physical education, foreign languages and calculus. And the
school would be large enough overall to allow for a football team, a
marching band and other popular perks of student life.
Over the last few years, Herrera has been subdividing part of the old
Belmont High School into academies, with favorable results. Students feel
a greater sense of belonging to a social group, he said, and teachers
compare notes in an effort to spot students in trouble.
Such collaboration among teachers and other adults appeared to be
lacking at Columbine, with a student population of 1,965. Dylan Klebold
and Eric Harris, the two gunmen who killed 13 others before taking their
own lives, gave plenty of indication that they were headed for explosive
trouble, but the adults who knew bits and pieces of the puzzle failed to
pool information that might have prompted an intervention.
Could a small enrollment have helped head off such a disaster?
Quite possibly, said Kathleen Cotton, a researcher at the Northwest
Regional Educational Laboratory in Portland, Ore.
"In large schools it is inevitable that many students will be
marginalized and alienated," Cotton said. "Some researchers even use the
term 'redundant' to describe the many young people who are left over
after all the teams, clubs and student government slots are filled with
more popular students."
Most students become resigned to being a nobody and keep a low
profile, she said. But those who buck the system with attention-getting
talk, clothes or behavior can count on being mistreated.
"If that makes them angry enough, and if they have access to
firearms," Cotton said, "they can exact a terrible revenge."
In smaller schools, students tend to develop closer relationships with
teachers and one another. However, size alone doesn't dictate success,
educators and researchers say. The notion of community must permeate the
school, and teachers must be committed enough to take collective
responsibility for all students.
"Kids need adults," said Jacqueline Ancess, a researcher at Columbia
University's Teachers College.
New York, Ancess' home turf, is a hotbed of small-school activity.
Some of the 150 or so schools that share the philosophy have performed
well, but others have had trouble finding appropriate housing and have
been lax in gathering and posting achievement data, making it difficult
for parents and politicians to judge them.
By all accounts, one of the most successful is Central Park East
Secondary School in East Harlem. The school boasts a graduation rate of
90% in a city where the average is 50%.
Deborah Meier, a longtime advocate who now heads a 150-student K-6
charter school in Boston, went on after founding Central Park East to
advise the city's school board on how to salvage Julia Richman High
School on the Upper East Side. Until several years ago, it was the
lowest-achieving school in Manhattan, drawing students primarily from
East Harlem who dropped out at a high rate.
Over time, the big high school was phased out, supplanted by six new
schools scattered throughout the community, including a junior high for
severely autistic children and a school for pupils in pre-kindergarten
through eighth grade.
Each school has its own space, schedule, staff and curriculum. None is
larger than 300 students, said Ann Cook, co-director of the Urban
Academy, one of the autonomous high schools in the complex.
Heading into the high schools' third graduation, the "statistics are
extremely good," Cook said. Things also have improved from a security
standpoint. In the past, metal scanners were used but failed to detect
all weapons. Now the scanners are gone, Cook said, "and there are almost
no incidents."
Working against the spread of small schools is the long-held
conviction of many educators that large is better. Many still align
themselves with views dating from the 1950s that large schools can offer
a broader curriculum and a more varied experience. Districts also tend to
fret that small schools would cost more because of the need for more
staff and facilities. Not surprisingly, small-school proponents dispute
most of those arguments.
Schools are getting bigger in Los Angeles "out of necessity, not out
of educational theory," said Ray Rodriguez, the Los Angeles Unified
School District's director of project management and construction. Land
is expensive and tough to find. And unlike New York, he added, Los
Angeles cannot put schools in high-rises because of strict seismic codes.
"Unfortunately," he said, "we don't have the luxury [of going small]."
Creating a Feeling of Community
But Elizabeth Learning Center in Cudahy proves that ingenuity can
sometimes accomplish what facilities planners and project managers
cannot.
The school was transformed five years ago when it was selected as one
of nine national model schools for the New American Schools Development
Corp., a privately sponsored reform effort. A high school and middle
school were added over several years to the existing elementary school.
High school students now share the large campus with 1,200 elementary
pupils and 980 middle schoolers. The student population is almost
entirely Latino; many of the students' parents speak only Spanish and
have had only a sixth-grade education.
Administrators attempt to reduce the scale of the middle school by
dividing the children into "clusters," said Elizabeth Neat, curriculum
coordinator. Interdisciplinary teams of teachers work together to develop
complementary instruction plans. In the elementary school, smaller class
size has helped keep things manageable.
The school's sense of community is palpable. Throughout the day,
students greet siblings, cousins and friends of varying ages. High school
students routinely help with math and reading in primary classes. The
community feeling is enhanced by a family health center, an on-site child
care center and a large adult education program that attracts many
parents. Dozens of parents volunteer regularly at the school.
High school students select one of two academies: health or
information technology. Most students aspire to college, but the skills
they pick up in the academies can help them find work if need be. Test
scores have been rising, and nobody gets teased for being a bookworm.
"It's not a magic formula," said Principal Emilio Vasquez. "If you
scale down to [a few hundred students], you've got a tight group."
Many of 11th-grader Blanca Hernandez's friends from the area chose to
attend Bell High School, partly because it is a big school with a strong
football team. But they complain of the lack of attention from teachers
and counselors.
"Here we can talk to a counselor like a friend," said Hernandez, 16.
"If your grades are dropping, they ask what's wrong. It helps to know
that somebody cares."
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