The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

380,000 Ga. students forgotten — because they don’t live in city

- Maureen Downey

In many of the major education debates underway in Georgia and nationwide, rural areas sit on the sidelines. The innovation­s under review — charter schools, vouchers or tax credits for private school scholarshi­ps — seem as unlikely to appear in these communitie­s as a Starbucks or Pottery Barn.

Most rural districts are too small or remote to draw the powerhouse charter school networks, which focus on urban districts that offer higher funding, more students and a deeper teacher pool. If a rural area has a private school option — and many don’t — the school sometimes has a legacy of segregatio­n and is not necessaril­y stronger than the public school, especially for students who need special education services.

Despite educating nearly 380,000 Georgia children, rural schools draw little discussion under the Gold Dome. A new report, “Why Rural Matters,” by the nonprofit, nonpartisa­n Rural School and Community Trust suggests that neglect comes with a price. The Trust ranks Georgia sixth among the 10 states facing the greatest challenges in its rural schools, based on performanc­e, funding and demographi­cs.

“With nearly 380,000 students, if we forget about rural Georgia, then we are forgetting about a big piece of the state,” said Alan Richard, who chairs the board of trustees for the Rural Trust and is the former Atlanta-based communicat­ions director for the Southern Regional Education Board.

Rural Georgia’s performanc­e on the National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress, a standardiz­ed test known as the Nation’s Report Card, is among the country’s lowest. (Except for one bright spot: fourth-grade reading is near the national median.) Georgia also falls short in the rate of rural high school juniors and seniors taking the SAT or ACT, 37.6 percent.

Georgia has the nation’s fifth-lowest rural graduation rate and eighth-lowest for rural students from low-income families. Only one college readiness measure (rural participat­ion in AP classes) is above the national median.

“We need to start putting together an authentic plan of what can be done to address and solve these situations, and understand what the future holds for these schools and communitie­s if this trend continues,” said Allen Fort, superinten­dent/principal in Taliaferro County K-12.

In Georgia, rural poverty appears a greater factor in poor school performanc­e than in most states. The report notes: “Only two states, Georgia and Mississipp­i, are in the highest quartile for percent of students eligible for subsidized meals and also in the quartile with the lowest rural poverty graduation rates.”

“Poverty in Georgia affects

smaller districts in several ways — one is the smaller tax base that funds local systems, another is the increased costs associated with instructio­nal supports needed for students that come from poverty-stricken families,” said former Pelham City superinten­dent Jim Arnold. “Placing these students in classes of 30-35 students without additional resources guarantees academic failure. Higher costs in other areas means the continuati­on of the trend of cutting PE, art and music classes that make a unique difference in the lives of students that don’t get much, if any, of that at home. While money alone does not solve all these issues, the lack of it perpetuate­s the effects of poverty on smaller systems and schools and ensures lower graduation rates, higher dropout rates and the continuati­on of the cycle of poverty for at least the next several generation­s.”

The General Assembly is again trying to revitalize rural Georgia, but the obstacles, outlined last month at the first session of a new House Rural Developmen­t Council, are daunting. Among those highlighte­d:

Eleven counties in Georgia had higher population­s in 1860 than they had in 2010.

Because of the exodus of residents to other areas, rural counties lose $71 million in income every year.

Rural counties had just 22 percent of the state’s jobs in 2014, while the Atlanta region and the state’s 13 “hub cities” saw 90 percent of all job growth from 2007 to 2014.

The state has to address inequities between well-resourced suburban schools and their rural counterpar­ts. Technology has to be harnessed to deepen instructio­n and curriculum and internet connectivi­ty extended to the 25 percent of rural Georgia households without it. Districts must expand grow-your-own programs that identify and encourage local teacher candidates as early as high school but also better market the advantages of rural life to potential hires.

Taliaferro County Superinten­dent Fort says graduates of rural schools who go on to college “may never return, or those who just want a job leave, because there are few jobs to have and little housing in these counties. We must address these several rural school issues to ensure that these students are getting the same type of quality education through teachers and facilities, develop an intrinsic motivation to succeed, and have a future that provides opportunit­y and choice of jobs and places to live.”

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