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Howley, Craig B. – Online Submission, 2004
Critiquing arguments from the "small school" movement in cities such as New York and Chicago, this paper provides a basis for making sense of the apparent divergence in policies governing schooling structures in rural and urban places. Its interpretation examines the way the urban small schools movement works to valorize (and hence draw support…
Descriptors: Small Schools, Rural Schools, Urban Schools, Rural Urban Differences
Bingler, Steven; Diamond, Barbara M.; Hill, Bobbie; Hoffman, Jerry L.; Howley, Craig B.; Lawrence, Barbara Kent; Mitchell, Stacy; Rudolph, David; Washor, Elliot – 2002
This publication summarizes research on the educational and social benefits of small schools and the negative effects of large schools on students, teachers, and members of the community, as well as the "diseconomies of scale" inherent in large schools. It asserts that research shows that measuring the cost of education by graduates rather than by…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Educational Facilities Planning, Educational Finance, Literature Reviews
Howley, Craig B.; Bickel, Robert – 1999
Previous studies found that the small size of schools or school districts mitigated the negative influence of poverty on academic achievement in California, Alaska, and West Virginia. The Matthew Project extends this research in four additional states selected to provide varied settings: Ohio, Georgia, Texas, and Montana. Data from each state were…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Economically Disadvantaged, Elementary Secondary Education, School District Size
Howley, Craig B.; Harmon, Hobart – 1997
This paper uses data from a survey of K-12 unit schools to fashion a measure of small school sustainability and relate it to variables pertinent to the rural context. Drawing on definitions of sustainable development and sustainable agriculture, this study proposes sustainability as a concept appropriate to schooling in general, and to small rural…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Efficiency, Elementary Secondary Education, Institutional Survival
Howley, Craig B. – 1989
This digest reviews recent evidence of the positive effects of small-scale schooling on student achievement. Historically, larger school size has been viewed as an important educational reform producing cost-effectiveness and educational efficiency. Today, small-scale schooling is found primarily in rural areas and small towns. A 1964 study…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Elementary Secondary Education, Performance Factors, Rural Schools
Howley, Craig B. – Journal of Rural and Small Schools, 1989
Recent studies of effects of small-scale schooling on student achievement suggest that, when the interaction between SES and organizational scale is accounted for, small schools provide substantial benefits to low-SES students. Mechanisms may include small class size, good student affect, and cooperative interpersonal relationships. Contains 54…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education, School District Size
Howley, Craig B. – 2000
Organization and information resources are presented to help community and school district leaders sustain and improve small high schools. Contact information and brief descriptions are provided for 11 organizations that either have a significant direct influence on educational policymaking or assemble knowledge and information helpful to efforts…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Annotated Bibliographies, Educational Facilities, Educational Policy
Howley, Craig B.; Bickel, Robert – 2000
This report summarizes a series of studies on school size, poverty, and student achievement. These studies analyzed 29 sets of test scores from various grades in Georgia, Ohio, Montana, and Texas to examine the relationship between school-level performance on tests, school size, and community poverty level. The studies found that as schools become…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Consolidated Schools, Disadvantaged Youth, Educational Research
Johnson, Jerry D.; Howley, Craig B.; Howley, Aimee A. – 2002
Previous studies in seven states have shown that school and district size consistently mediated the relationship between socioeconomic status (SES) and student achievement, with results critically relevant to state-level policymaking. The present study examined how the relationship between size and achievement varied in Arkansas schools and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Black Students, Educational Equity (Finance), Educational Policy
DeYoung, Alan J.; Howley, Craig B. – 1992
This paper argues that social, political, and economic circumstances provide better explanations of rural school consolidation than the advertised curricular, pedagogical, or administrative benefits. Modern views of schooling over recent decades emphasize economic development and the need to improve international competitiveness. There is a…
Descriptors: Consolidated Schools, Economic Development, Economic Factors, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Howley, Craig B. – Research in Rural Education, 1989
Critiques the notion of school district efficiency and applies 1 definition to the performance of all 178 Kentucky districts. Finds that achievement test performance of inefficient districts exceeded that of efficient districts by .20 standard deviation, and that efficiency was related to smallness but not ruralness. Contains 26 references.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Comparative Analysis, Correlation, Educational Economics
Howley, Craig B. – 1996
This dissertation synopsis examines the relationship of school size to the achievement of students of varying levels of socioeconomic status in West Virginia and investigates motives for consolidation in this mostly rural state. To control for varying grade-span configurations, size (of school and district) was defined as enrollment per grade…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, County School Districts, Elementary Secondary Education, Politics of Education
Howley, Craig B. – 1999
Previous studies found that the small size of schools or school districts mitigated the negative influence of poverty on academic achievement in California, Alaska, and West Virginia. The Matthew Project extends this research in four additional states selected to provide varied settings. Montana has a remarkable number of small schools and small…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, American Indians, Correlation, Economically Disadvantaged
Howley, Craig B. – 1999
Previous studies found that the small size of schools or school districts mitigated the negative influence of poverty on academic achievement in California, Alaska, and West Virginia. The Matthew Project extends this research in four additional states selected to provide varied settings. Ohio is a very diverse, urbanized state with a large…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Correlation, Economically Disadvantaged, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Howley, Craig B.; Harmon, Hobart L. – Rural Educator, 2000
A nationwide study of 205 K-12 unit schools found above-average test scores, postsecondary attendance, and high school completion rates. Both satellite and Internet systems were used in two-fifths of these schools. Single-school districts spent more per pupil on unit schools, employed more cooperative strategies, and were more fiscally…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Distance Education, Educational Cooperation, Elementary Secondary Education
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