Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs
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2007
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Item Title
A tribute to people and places
A lot to learn from Minnesota Student Survey
Scottish surprises and American schools
Why You Value writing
You and the gift of reading
Can/should Minnesota learn from outstanding rural high schools such as those in Hibbing, Henderson,
Now what for school funding?
The Cincinnati Example
Lessons from green roofs in Elk River and St. Paul
Students' Shoes Tell Poignant Stories
Teachers Who Touch Our Lives
The Sputnik shock
New test results provide clarity & confusion
A frank, powerful mother speaks out
Three Stooges and Three Branches of Government – Who Knows?
Four "A's" for a better school year
Amazing website for youth and families
Unfortunate case of parent over-involvement
Many students will benefit from equity funding legislation
Making Memorial Day, memorable
Standing Ovation Rewards Great Results
“Stop!” demanded the state trooper...
"Geek is chic" and other student insights
How do YOU use writing?
Minnesota University security reflect/respond to Virginia tragedy
Teaching Students, not just Skills
Peterson illustrates positive parent power
Blue ribbons to critics of this column
Possible legislative help for parents of “fascinating/frustrating” teenagers
High School League ignores local realities
Resolving the school start conflict
Does 30% retention rate = 82% high school grad rate?
PSEO: A great option for Minnesota students
Anoka-Hennepin STEP illustrates value of “Governor Pawlenty’s college for all” idea
Making a Good Proposal Better
$3-400 Million More Does Not Guarantee Better Schools
Attacks growing on Minnesota educational opportunities
Three highlights
 
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  • 2009  ( 5 items )
  • 2008  ( 44 items )

    Joe's most recent article

    {mosloadposition JoeCol}

    Published 1/14/08

    Smaller Schools are Safer, Saner

    On average, students do better in smaller public schools. Families also are more involved, and faculty feel safer, and more fulfilled. Those are key messages found in a new report published by the Center for School Change(CSC), where I work. We’ve sent a copy to every Minnesota public library. The report also can be found on the web at http://www.ncef.org/pubs/saneschools.pdf

    The report includes many color pictures of outstanding rural, urban and suburban small schools in Minnesota and 10 other states. It’s a major revision of a report we issued in 2001, which has been purchased or “downloaded” from a computer more than 50,000 times. It’s called Smaller, Safer, Saner, Successful Schools.

    Here is one of the charts that appears in the study. The chart shows, for example, that while 21% of urban public school teachers in schools serving 200-749 students report robbery of theft happened at least once a month, 50% of urban public school teachers in schools with 1200 or more students reported this happened at least once a month.


    Teacher Reports of Daily, Weekly or Monthly Incidents by
    Urban Public School Size


    Type of incident 200-749 students 1200 or more students

    Robbery/Theft 21% 50%
    Vandalism 18% 44%
    Verbal Abuse of
    Teachers 30% 57%
    Use of illegal drugs 5% 45%


    This information comes from a study we cite done by University of Washington researchers. They examined reports from thousands of U.S. urban teachers.

    The report also notes the benefits of smaller schools in suburban and rural areas. We point out Minnesota research that I have discussed before regarding the percentage of Minnesota public high school graduates who entered Minnesota public colleges or universities and then took one or more remedial courses in reading, writing or math. ALL 50 of the Minnesota public high schools with the smallest percentage of graduates in Minnesota public colleges or universities were in rural Minnesota, and 45 of the 50 were quite small.

    This does NOT mean that every small school is excellent, But the report shows that on average, students in smaller schools are safer, and achieve more, whether measured by test scores, graduation rates or other factors.

    We also show that faculty working in smaller schools, in general, feel more fulfilled than those in larger similar schools. And we cite studies concluding that smaller schools are not necessarily more expensive.

    Sheena Thao, who co-wrote the report, and I believe we should stop debating which is better, district or charter public schools. There are excellent examples of both.
    We urge that communities, educators learn from the best. We also suggest that foundations and legislators might establish ways to help communities apply lessons from the finest district and charter public schools. This might include forums to discuss them, and funds to help replicate them.

    The report honors and celebrate outstanding schools. We hope that “Smaller, Safer, Saner, Successful Schools” is encouraging and useful.

     

  • 2004  ( 36 items )
  • 2005  ( 38 items )
  • 2006  ( 37 items )