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Monk, David H. – 1990
Enrollment levels of high schools are positively related to the number of courses offered. The most common way to expand educational opportunities in communities served by small high schools is to increase enrollment, usually by means of consolidation. Size, however, is not always the predictor of course offerings, as some relatively small schools…
Descriptors: Community Characteristics, Courses, Educational Opportunities, Enrollment
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Monk, David H.; Haller, Emil J. – American Educational Research Journal, 1993
Relationships between high school structural characteristics and curricular offerings are examined using data from the High School and Beyond Survey, with an emphasis on school size. Findings are consistent with the hypothesis that effects of size are differentiated within high schools. Implications for equality of education are discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Access to Education, Courses, Equal Education, High School Students
Haller, Emil J.; Monk, David H. – 1992
The persistent net loss of young people from rural areas has potentially contradictory implications for educational policy. Believing that youth migration to urban areas is inevitable, one school board might feel obligated to prepare students for urban jobs. Another board might view such actions as community suicide and attempt to slow…
Descriptors: College Attendance, Educational Policy, High Schools, Military Service
Monk, David H.; Haller, Emil J. – 1990
This paper examines the degree to which high-school course offerings are unequally distributed across schools, paying attention to relationships between school size and the incidence of new course titles in various curriculum areas. The inquiry is based on the presumption that economies of scale play a role in educational opportunity. The study is…
Descriptors: Advanced Courses, Course Selection (Students), Courses, Educational Opportunities
Monk, David H. – 1986
This report examines how the curricular offerings of large secondary schools compare with the curricular offerings of small secondary schools. The study is motivated by theories of production which hold that economies are available in large compared to small schools; it is pointed out, however, that larger schools may not take advantage of…
Descriptors: Class Size, Comparative Analysis, Consolidated Schools, Cost Effectiveness