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Husock, Howard – American Enterprise Institute, 2021
The challenge of reopening US public schools in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic has high-lighted the significant role that local teachers unions play in setting policy. The politics of school reopening during the pandemic has brought to the national spotlight the outsized role that teachers unions play in managing big cities. Bureau of Labor…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, School District Size, School Districts, Unions
Mills, Jonathan N.; McGee, Josh B.; Greene, Jay P. – Department of Education Reform, University of Arkansas, 2013
The consolidation of schools and districts has been one of the most widespread education reforms of the last century; however, surprisingly little research has directly investigated the effectiveness of consolidation as a reform strategy. We provide new evidence on this topic by taking advantage of a natural experiment in Arkansas that occurred…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, Academic Achievement, School Closing, School District Size
Dunlap, James A. – ProQuest LLC, 2013
This study examined whether or not enrollment, poverty rate, and district type could be used to predict cost and achievement, as measured on the Illinois Standards Achievement Test and Prairie State Achievement Exam, at the building and district levels within the state of Illinois. This study provides quantitative data that will aid educational…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, Poverty, School Districts, School District Size
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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
Graves, Bill – School Administrator, 2010
For decades, people questioned the sense of having two school districts, each with its own superintendent, central office and high school, operating in the same small town of The Dalles on the banks of the Columbia River in north-central Oregon. But election campaigns to consolidate repeatedly failed because each community had strong emotional…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, High Schools, School Districts, School District Size
Durflinger, Norm; Haeffele, Lynne – Center for the Study of Education Policy, 2011
This policy brief reviews the arguments for and against school district consolidation and the research regarding consolidation effects, with data specific to school districts in Illinois. A tiered approach to studying consolidation potential is presented as a viable option for policymakers to consider. The following topics are presented: (1)…
Descriptors: Public Schools, School Districts, Consolidated Schools, Educational Research
Center for the Study of Education Policy, 2009
Since the days when the country was dotted with one-room schoolhouses, many changes have taken place in school governance and management. In 1940, there were over 117,000 public school districts in the United States. In 2000, there were fewer than 15,000, even though the student population of the country had doubled in that time. While school…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, Governance, School Organization, County School Districts
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Duncombe, William; Yinger, John – Education Finance and Policy, 2007
Consolidation has dramatically reduced the number of school districts in the United States. Using data from rural school districts in New York, this article provides the first direct estimation of consolidation's cost impacts. We find economies of size in operating spending: all else equal, doubling enrollment cuts operating costs per pupil by…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Educational Finance, School Districts, Costs
Kidd, Kenneth – Spectrum, 1986
Presents some of the arguments and reviews the research on small school districts. Based on experiences in Indiana, contends that consolidated school superiority is exaggerated. With proper planning and innovation, small schools can effectively share human, material, and financial resources. Eighteen references are provided. (MLF)
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, Elementary Secondary Education, Rural Schools, School District Reorganization
Rogers, Robert G. – Spectrum, 1987
Challenges a 1985 Illinois State Board of Education report inferring that students attending high schools with enrollments below 500 have fewer learning opportunities and (based on achievement test scores) are generally less well-educated than students attending larger schools. Results actually favor smaller high schools despite the trend toward…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Consolidated Schools, School District Size, School Size
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Butler, Richard J.; Monk, David H. – Journal of Human Resources, 1985
Attention is focused on the possible loss of efficiency associated with efforts to increase size by closing schools and consolidating school districts. Empirical evidence from New York State is presented that shows that lower levels of efficiency exist in large compared to small school districts. Implications for policy are explored. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, Cost Effectiveness, Educational Policy, Public Education
Berlin, Barney; And Others – 1989
Americans tend to value bigger as better. Conventional wisdom over the years has dictated that "too small" schools and school districts could not provide sufficient educational opportunities. Since 1930, the number of school districts has shrunk from 128,000 to less than 16,000. As districts consolidate, parents feel distant from schools and…
Descriptors: Class Size, Consolidated Schools, Economic Factors, Elementary Secondary Education
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Uerling, Donald F. – Rural Educator, 1986
Examined relationship between 1983-84 Nebraska high school enrollments and program breadth and junior-senior high school enrollments and teacher endorsement rates. Concluded rural district reorganization/consolidation resulting in larger secondary grade enrollments would probably result in more course offerings but would not affect percentage of…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, Courses, Enrollment, Rural Education
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Adams, Jacob E., Jr.; Foster, E. Michael – Journal of Education Finance, 2002
Compares Kentucky's school district organization with those of other states; defines "small" school districts; analyzes the relationship between district size and state education costs in Kentucky; concludes that state cannot save money by consolidating small school districts. (Contains 48 references.) (Authors/PKP)
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, Cost Effectiveness, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education
Russo, Alexander – School Administrator, 2006
Consolidations come in all shapes and sizes, including mergers, annexations and dissolutions. They do not all take place under state mandate, however. A handful of districts consolidate every year in some states like Illinois that have large numbers of small districts, many of them dual districts that serve K-8 or 9-12 in the same geographic area.…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, School District Reorganization, School District Size, Change Strategies
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