Class
Size Reduction to Enhance Student Achievement
I
believe schools need to examine the effect of individual class size
on a child's education at the secondary level. Due to budget cuts,
districts cannot afford to pay for more teachers. Thus, they place
students in classrooms to the point that the classes are well over
capacity. Discipline issues increase; individualized instruction
decreases; and students begin to fall through the cracks of the
education system.
Particularly
in Texas, many districts are not meeting standards according to the
assessment scoring system. When a district or particular school
within a district continually falls below expectations, students
zoned to that district or school are allowed to transfer to another
district or school within the district. As a result, well-performing
districts are being packed full of students. For example, in my
district, we are a town of 18,000, but our schools service over
10,000 students. Many of the surrounding districts are falling under,
and their students are transferring to my district. My school is 170
students over capacity with every room in the building being used as
a classroom including a resource workroom and a computer lab. We are
out of individual desks, thus students are sitting at tables crammed
into any available space in the room.
I
have taught at several different districts at all grade levels
ranging from 5-12. I have had various class sizes including 15-18
students during my second year to my current situation in which all
my classes contain 33-35 students. The most productive I have felt as
a teacher was in my second year when I had a small group of students.
I was able to offer more individualized instruction, and students
were engaged with minimal distractions. Currently, I have 35 students
in one of my classes, and while I am doing my best as a teacher, it
is hard to not spend my time redirecting because the students have so
many different potential distractions. It is nearly impossible to
give individualized instruction every day to every student because
there is not enough time in each 70-minute period to truly invest. I
have talked to several board members, teachers, parents,
administrators, and other stakeholders who believe that smaller
classes sizes will solve several issues that occur in our educational
system.
I
believe it is very important that we begin to analyze the effects
that these large class sizes are having on student performance. It is
important that we continue to push individualized instruction, but
for this to be effective, districts have to decrease the class sizes
so that teachers can truly invest in each student. I always say that
we could solve so many of the problems in our schools if we had
smaller class sizes. It is inevitable that some students are going to
fall through the cracks when you have a class of 35 students for only
50 minutes. It is nearly impossible to expect a teacher to be able to
individualize instruction for so many students in such a short amount
of time with very little to no support or resources. As a result,
students' learning gaps grow bigger and bigger to the point that
the students end up dropping out because it just gets too hard. I
think we will improve the quality of the education we offer if only
we could have smaller class sizes so that we can truly individualize
instruction.
Review
of the Related Literature
History
of class size reduction. Evol
Graham (2009) provides an explanation on the history of the education
system in which he explains how everyone has been given an
opportunity for a free education. He places emphasis on the word
'equal', and he furthur emphasizes how it is hard for teachers to
give every student the same equal education when students come in at
all different levels, and it is too hard to individualize the
instruction when there are so many students to reach. He says that
the struggle began during integration in the 1960s because the
impoverished children needed more personal assistance from the
teacher, thus productively running a large class was difficult. He
essentially argues that the shift from homogenous populations in
school to more diverse populations is the main reason overcrowding
classrooms cannot exist. According to Graue,
Rauscher, & Sherfinski (2009), Class-Size Reduction (CSR)
initiatives were prominent in the 1990s due to the economy boom. It
was easier for districts to implement such a large undertaking
because funds were allocated to them to support hiring more teachers.
In 1999, the federal government implemented a Class-Size Reduction
Program in which they allocated federal funds to the states to give
to districts who qualified based on a combination of poverty and
enrollment (Millsap et al., 2004, p. 1). According to Millsaps et al.
(2004), "As part of the reauthorization of the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act of 1965 (ESEA), the CSR program was folded
into Title II, Part A, of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001
(NCLB)" (p. 1). Currently, districts may still use those funds for
the reduction of class sizes. Matthew
Chingos (2013) summed up the current exploration of these initiatives
as being mostly a budget issue. He suggests that policymakers need to
examine the district's funding to allow for such initiatives as to
appease taxpayers who have overwhelmingly expressed their desire for
smaller class sizes for students. As
a result of the federal initiative, many states began a state-wide
CSR program, and I will address some of the major implementations and
benefits of these programs.
Wisconsin's
CSR program. In
Wisconsin, three women studied the impact of reducing class sizes.
Graue,
Rauscher, & Sherfinski (2009) looked at a class-size-reduction
(CSR) program in Wisconsin over 3 years in 27 classrooms in 9
schools. This program was titled Student Achievement Guaranteed in
Education (SAGE), and it reduced the class size to a ratio of 15:1,
students to teachers. These three women found that instead of seeing
class size and teacher quality as competitors, people need to see
them as complements to each other. They used mixed research to
analyze the data from the schools in Wisconsin, but they explain how
it is very hard to measure the quality of an education. To gather
their research, they had seven half-day observations, interviews with
the staff, surveys, and analysis of different measures of student
achievement. Also, they used CLASS for the assessment scoring system
due to its empirical record, and it covered the domains deemed
important in analyzing class-reduction programs. Further research
done in Wisconsin's SAGE initiative confirmed an increase in
achievement, especially in the lower grades. Thompson (2006) found
that there was a significant increase in achievement in low-income
children and black children. In my opinion, this was an especially
important finding because where we see the lowest achievement scores
and dropout rates are those of low-income children and black
children. Districts spend much time and resources trying to search
for answers to increasing the scores of these with such labels.
Perhaps, this is a viable solution.
California's
CSR Program. California
implemented a very expensive program, and Jepsen
and Rivkin (2009) took a deeper look at the effects of California's
class-size-reduction program that began in 1996. They looked at seven
different school calendar years to evaluate whether California's
class-size-reduction program was successful or not. They found that
there was a significant positive effect on student achievement for
those in small class sizes in primary grades. In analyzing the data,
districts saw an increase in reading and mathematics achievement. The
program was especially effective for grades K-3.
Tennessee's
CSR program.
The most widely known and effective CSR program was Tennessee's
Project STAR. It was the results and success from their program that
inspired many of the other state's initiatives. The
Tennessee STAR Experiment started with a kindergarten class in which
the district randomly assigned teachers and students to either a
class of 15 or a class of 23 (Chingos, 2013, p. 417). The students
who were randomly assigned stayed in a reduced class size throughout
the years of the experiment. The results were positive as they saw
significant increases in student achievement and student scores, not
only during the experiment years, but it impacted these students
positively in the years following the experiment (Gilman & Kiger,
2003, p. 83). However, I believe the most positive impact came for
minority students who received instruction in a small class for
reading as proven through the study by Nye, Hedges, and
Konstantopoulos
(2004). They found that there were "lasting benefits" for
minority students who were a part of the experiment. Once again, I
think such a finding is important when considering CSR program.
Teacher
quality and additional implementations. In
order to best implement a CSR program, you cannot just simply reduce
class sizes; there are additional things to consider for it to be
most effective. Graue, Rauscher, & Sherfinski (2009) concluded
that there is more that affects student achievement than just class
size. While small class sizes did allow for more individualized
instruction, they advised that if a district wants to implement a CSR
program, they have to be prepared to implement other things. They
need to evaluate the climate of the school, the quality of
instruction and teachers, and the physical space in the classroom.
All these other factors affect student achievement in addition to
class size reduction. Jepsen and Rivkin (2009) not only analyzed
student achievement, but they also looked at the quality of the
teachers in these schools. However, they essentially concluded that
it does not matter the size of the class if the quality of teaching
was lacking. Many other resources that I came across during my
research suggested the importance of teacher quality in addition to
reducing the class size. In evaluating the research, I have
synthesized that teachers, if given the opportunity to teach to small
group of students, will be more likely to increase their quality of
teaching. I think they will be more willing to seek out professional
development on individualized instruction and differentiation because
they will be able to effectively implement these best practices.
Benefits
of a CSR program. All
stakeholders benefit from a CSR initiative. When student achievement
is higher and learning gaps are closed, students become a positive
impact for their community even moving into adulthood. Gilman and
Kiger (2003) sum it up when they said:
Teachers
report experiencing lower levels of stress and job dissatisfaction
with smaller classes, primarily because they are better able to
attend to each student individually and, as a consequence, student
motivation increases and discipline problems decrease. Parents
believe that teachers' individualized instruction leads to
improvements in their children's academic performance. Teachers of
smaller classes also have more time to interact with parents, and
their increased knowledge of their students strengthens those
interactions. (p. 83)
References
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M. M. (2013). Class size and student outcomes: research and policy
implications.
Journal
Of Policy Analysis And Management,
32(2),
411-438.
Gilman,
D. A., & Kiger, S. (2003). Should we try to keep class sizes
small?. Educational
Leadership,
60(7),
80-85.
Graham,
E. (2009). Public
education - the case for reduced class size.
Orange, California:
Argosy
University.
Graue,
E., Rauscher, E., & Sherfinski, M. (2009). The synergy of class
size reduction and
classroom
quality. Elementary
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178-201.
Jepsen,
C., & Rivkin, S. (2009). Class size reduction and student
achievement: the potential
tradeoff
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223-250.
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and
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Class-Size Reduction Program: Final Report. US
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Nye,
B., Hedges, L. V., & Konstantopoulos, S. (2004). Do minorities
experience larger lasting
benefits
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model: direct
instruction,
target teach, and class size reduction. Third
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