New York City is making
impressive strides toward the goal of replacing large and often dysfunctional
factory-style high schools with smaller schools where children have closer
contact with faculty members. The small schools quickly improved attendance and
promotion rates. And a new analysis by the city shows that the 47 new schools
opened since 2002 have also achieved significantly higher graduation rates.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg
made small schools a central part of his education reform program and has
committed the city to opening at least 250. In contrast to traditional high
schools that sometimes have more than 3,000 students, the new schools have a
target size of fewer than 500. That allows them to bring down class size as
well. The goal is to create an intimate learning environment where course
offerings are both novel and rigorous and every student knows every teacher.
Critics worry that the new
schools would handpick the most desirable and most easily educated students,
leaving behind children with special needs or limited language skills. But the
city insists that more and more of those students would be included as the
schools build their faculties and capabilities. The city will need to make good
on that promise.
When it comes to graduation
rates the new small schools are already a clear improvement. Schools in poor
neighborhoods that once graduated less than half of their students are now
seeing graduation rates of 80 percent or even 90 percent. The city, which calculates
its overall graduation rate at 60 percent, still has a long way to go,
especially in impoverished, minority communities. But the data so far suggest
that the small school movement is at least part of the solution.