In Defense of Iowa’s Small Schools
March 27, 2009 5 Comments
I am proud to admit that I graduated from a small Iowa school district with twenty-seven students in my class. As a student I filled my day up with subjects that I needed to have to get me into college. There were the extra classes that I would have wanted to take, but my schedule did not allow it. Those who were not on the college track had enough classes to keep their interests also, but they were often encouraged to consider the cirriculum that the college bound were taking.
Students in my small school did not slip through the cracks and were encouraged to push themselves. They weren’t put into categories because of performance or post secondary plans; they were a name and not a number. (And good luck with sneaking outside to smoke because teachers knew exactly who was supposed to be where.) Also, parents and teachers knew each other and conversation between the two was easy.
I had a unique opportunity to be involved with four sports, band, music, drama, the yearbook and school paper. I didn’t get to do all of these things because I was so talented. I was mediocre at best, but the lack of huge numbers of competition allowed me a chance to be a part of a lot of things I never could have in a large school. It kept me busy and it kept me out of trouble.
The school wasn’t just the school, but it was the community. The students and teachers I saw every day were the same people I saw in the grocery store, went to church with, and sat by at basketball games. It seemed like there was never a good opportunity to misbehave. It was more than just academics, it was a sense of belonging. The main street was the hub of social events after school functions, especially a trip to Des Moines for a state tournament appearance where our small school usually had more supporters show up than any of the big schools.
I’ll admit that I have an emotional argument for the rural schools, but there is also logical and statistical proof to what I have realized all along. What I described about small schools relates to stronger student performance and lower drop-out rate than the larger ones.
Ryan Frederick, an activist in support of rural schools, has a blog in which he writes in opposition to Senator Matt McCoy, Representative Wayne Ford, and HF 761 for school consolidations. He highlights how the largest and most expensive school districts are also the ones with the higest drop-out rate. In another blog entry Ryan points out how smaller schools outperform in the areas that larger schools underperform. He also attacks the argument that consolidating schools would save the state money. He gives West Virginia’s statistics as an example; a state that has been aggressively closing schools for consolidation since 1990. It has actually cost them more money in building costs and salaries, the promised advanced courses never materialized or were cancelled, and there were more students on buses and they were on them for longer than state guidelines.
It looks like Iowa Democrats just want to end up spending more on schools while achieving less. School consolidation does not make any sense to me performance wise or financially. Could it be that one of the real reasons closing the small schools seems so appealing to the liberal agenda is that it is some of these schools who still have teachers who promote the ideals of the founding fathers and maybe say an occasional prayer in front of a third grade class before they go to lunch?
The more government involvement the better. Isn’t that what the Democrats are trying to say?
When i went to highschool there was several country boys who came to school and they had guns in their trucks yes ! Guns And 25 -30 yrs ago we didnt dream about shooting someone with them. We got a much better education 30 yrs ago they taught basics then, Its sad to see young people who cant even count change back to you when you buy something this is a everyday use of simple math we need and is being failed to be taught. Now they move so fast through the math you get or you didnt 30 yrs ago the teachers kept the whole class at it til we got it. Hammer over and over multiplications add subtract division.No worry no more no child left behind advance them on. My friend moved from Albia area to a Des Moines East side and went to East High his sister quit school shortly after going there a group of girls confronted her in the bathroom with a knife threatened to kill her cause they didnt like her and told her not to come back or they would kill her is this what we want ? city gang kids not likeing country kids in their school so threaten to kill them ? Think the drop out rate is going to skyrocket if we consolidate to big city schools that are failing to teach basics now ? I cant believe how quickly the country snowballing into a 3rd world country has happened. I graduated 25 yrs ago very sad state of affairs.
I’m thrilled to read your blog and the points you have made. I taught in a very small school for many years. Dropouts were a rarity. Knowing the way this country and state are headed, I have to wonder if we wouldn’t be better off with all small schools and local control.
It’s not Dems tha want to close small schools, it’s city people. Just like they want to consolidate small counties.
I live in a school district not much bigger than yours. I agree with most of your post, but prayer in the school is unconstitutional so let’s not go there.
Currently small schools are resigned to their fate of ever more consolidations. They ought to be putting a stop to it by lobbying the legislature. Thanks for the link. I’ll go see what that guy has to say.
Less local control makes for easier state indoctrination.