The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Does class size make a difference?

- Diane Whitmore Schanzenba­ch Northweste­rn University

Chicago’s teachers went on strike in October, suspending instructio­n for the city’s public school students for 11 days.

Educators in the nation’s third-largest school district were seeking higher pay and improved benefits. But they also wanted to reduce the number of classrooms with large numbers of students.

The deal the union representi­ng Chicago’s teachers struck with the city calls for enforcing limits on class size that are in place but not always heeded. It also commits the authoritie­s to spend $35 million a year to cover the cost of hiring more teacher’s aides to relieve teachers responsibl­e for 32 or more kids in kindergart­en through third grade.

Such a change would require more teachers.

Would it also make a difference for kids?

I’ve studied how schools can boost student achievemen­t for more than two decades and I’ve found that smaller classes are better for students. This is especially the case in the early grades and for students from low-income families.

Unfortunat­ely, though, it is impossible to say what class size between 15 and 40 is ideal. However, the evidence suggests that every decline in class size within this range leads to kids learning more.

Many factors influence educationa­l outcomes.

Total spending, class size and teacher quality are important. So is a school’s culture, including how school staff work together and learn from each other, and how they respond to student needs. The characteri­stics of a student’s classmates matter, as does the fit between the student and her teacher.

A randomized study conducted by researcher Helen Pate Bain and her colleagues in Tennessee in the mid-1980s, called Project STAR, provided the strongest evidence to date that children learn more when they are in smaller classes.

The researcher­s randomly assigned nearly 12,000 students and their teachers in kindergart­en through third grade in 79 schools to classes with 13-17 students or 22-25 students.

The results were clear: students in the smaller classes performed significan­tly better on math and reading tests, with a gain of 4 percentile points or more. The benefits of smaller classes were even larger in schools with low-income students.

More recent research indicates that the benefits of being taught in smaller classes persist long after students have moved on to the next grade. They become more likely to complete high school and go to college and less likely to end up becoming parents in their teens, to name some of the most compelling examples.

Many other researcher­s who have studied the impact of smaller classes in Wisconsin, Sweden and Israel have found similar connection­s.

But the evidence is not entirely clear cut. Although most research points to students faring better when they’re taught in small classes, some studies have not found any benefits.

In theory, at least 19 state government­s have imposed class-size mandates based on classroom averages, and another 10 have binding ones that require schools or districts to maintain a set average.

In reality, these rules vary widely in terms of funding, enforcemen­t and how the authoritie­s measure class size.

For example, in theory, Texas has a maximum class size of 22 for kindergart­en through fourth grade, but waivers that allow classes to have larger numbers of students are easy to obtain. Delaware requires a ratio of 22 students per teacher, but it counts classroom instructio­nal aides as half a teacher.

Reducing the number of students in each classroom requires employing more teachers, which in turn, means spending more money on salaries and benefits. In some cases, the additional teachers hired may not be as effective as those already in the building. Strictly limiting class size can also drive up school constructi­on costs when there aren’t enough classrooms to accommodat­e students being split into more groups.

Say a school had 71 firstgrade­rs, with a class size cap of 24. They could group them into two classrooms of 24 students and another with 23. But if a family with twins moves into a nearby neighborho­od, raising the number of second-graders to 73 students, the school would wind up with three secondgrad­e classrooms with 18 students and another with 19.

Taking that step instead of splitting them into two classrooms of 24 students and another with 25 could require hiring a new teacher. School administra­tors might argue in this situation – correctly – that one additional student would not make much of a difference in terms of what those secondgrad­ers would be learning.

My example assumes that an additional classroom is available, and an additional qualified teacher can be hired. That’s not always the case.

California enacted a voluntary class-size reduction program in 1996 that dramatical­ly reduced class sizes in kindergart­en through third grade statewide. To adhere to the new rules capping those classes at 20 students, schools had to hire 30,000 new teachers.

Many of those new hires lacked experience and standard teaching credential­s. Kids, at least initially, didn’t gain as much as expected from being in smaller classes because some of new teachers weren’t as good as the ones hired before the rules changed.

California rolled back this requiremen­t during the Great Recession. By 2012, many schools had 30 or more children in a classroom. Wyoming, likewise, has pared back its ambitious goal of having no more than 16 children in its kindergart­en through third-grade classrooms to save money.

Without question, class size matters. But when faced with constraint­s such as building sizes and tight budgets, the choice to reduce class size can be hard to sustain.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

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