NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 4 results Save | Export
Oxley, Diana – Phi Delta Kappan, 1994
Large school size adversely affects attendance, school climate, student involvement. Dividing large schools into small units creates a learning and teaching context that is more stable, intimate, supportive, interdisciplinary. Kohn-Holweide, a comprehensive German secondary school, groups all students at a given grade level with the same teachers…
Descriptors: Decentralization, Educational Quality, Foreign Countries, Heterogeneous Grouping
Oxley, Diana; And Others – 1990
This report concludes that the house plan should be the centerpiece of a systematic restructuring of New York City neighborhood high schools to reduce the dropout rate and improve academic achievement. The house plan is based on the subdivision of one or more grades into smaller schools within schools. Long-term monitoring of New York City dropout…
Descriptors: Board of Education Role, Dropout Prevention, Dropout Programs, Educational Improvement
Oxley, Diana; Croninger, Robert G.; DeGroot, Elisabeth – 2000
High schools organized into schools-within-schools (SWS) have the capacity to create social capital, a sense of trust and connection among teachers and students that can be used in the service of teaching and learning. These differentiated social groupings, or subunits, can influence members' sense of identity during the transition to high school,…
Descriptors: Curriculum Problems, Educational Environment, High Schools, House Plan
Oxley, Diana – Principal Leadership, 2005
In this article, the author discusses small learning communities (SLCs), a term that is used to refer to the practice of organizing secondary schools into smaller units. Features of SLCs include small structure, curricular specialization and choice, a focus on the learner and learning, and, in particular, the active and collaborative nature of…
Descriptors: School Activities, House Plan, Program Effectiveness, Program Improvement