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Howley, Craig; Johnson, Jerry; Petrie, Jennifer – National Education Policy Center, 2011
Arguments for consolidation, which merges schools or districts and centralizes their management, rest primarily on two presumed benefits: (1) fiscal efficiency and (2) higher educational quality. The extent of consolidation varies across states due to their considerable differences in history, geography, population density, and politics. Because…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, Efficiency, Educational Finance, Educational Improvement
Howley, Aimee; Howley, Marged; Hendrickson, Katie; Belcher, Johnny; Howley, Craig – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 2012
This case study focuses on a four-district collaborative that shared services for more than 15 years in an effort to retain rural schools and thereby to preserve community identity. With population losses in the four districts and suburbanization in the largest, the collaborative made extensive use of distance education in addition to itinerant…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Qualitative Research, Consolidated Schools, Distance Education
Howley, Aimee; Howley, Craig – 2001
This digest summarizes information suggesting that long bus rides are part of the hidden costs of school and district consolidation. Rural school districts spend more than twice per pupil what urban districts spend on transportation. A review of studies shows that rural school children were more likely than suburban school children to have bus…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Bus Transportation, Consolidated Schools, Disadvantaged Youth
Howley, Craig – 2001
This report provides the first detailed picture of the features of the rural school bus ride. Data were provided by principals in 696 rural elementary schools in Arkansas, Georgia, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and Washington--states chosen to represent diversity in region, locale, and ethnic composition. The literature commonly cites 30 minutes as…
Descriptors: Bus Transportation, Consolidated Schools, Disadvantaged, Elementary Education
Howley, Craig; And Others – American School Board Journal, 1996
Between 1968 and 1991, the number of middle schools in the United States quadrupled from about 2,000 to more than 8,500. A study in four states--Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia--suggests a connection between pursuit of the middle school concept, school closings, and diminished chances for the survival of rural communities. (MLF)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Community, Consolidated Schools, Intermediate Grades
Bickel, Robert; Howley, Craig; Williams, Tony; Glascock, Catherine – 2000
Research has revealed interactive effects of school size and socioeconomic status--as school size increases, the mean measured achievement of schools with disadvantaged students declines. The larger the number of less advantaged students attending a school, the greater the decline. The same school-level interactions have been found in California,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Consolidated Schools, Disadvantaged, Elementary Secondary Education
Howley, Craig – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 1996
School or district size was found to interact with socioeconomic status to influence student achievement in West Virginia; small schools facilitated the achievement of impoverished students, whereas large schools facilitated the achievement of affluent students. Addresses implications for educational policy and future research into effects of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Consolidated Schools, Educational Policy, Educational Research