Smaller, Safer, Saner Successful Schools. Second Edition

Smaller, Safer, Saner Successful Schools. Second Edition
Author: Joe Nathan
Publisher:
Total Pages: 72
Release: 2007
Genre:
ISBN:

More than $20 billion a year currently is being spent to construct public schools. Hundreds of billions are being spent to carry out public education. Everyone wants the best possible use of that money. Families want safe, nurturing, challenging, and effective schools for their children. Community members and policy-makers want schools to be successful, and to make efficient use of their tax dollars, regardless of how much is spent. This booklet is designed to help make those things happen, by giving readers opportunities to learn from some of the most effective, innovative district and charter public schools in the country. We can make significant progress toward what Americans want by using ideas from the finest small schools and schools that share facilities. This report combines profiles of district and charter public schools from all over the United States with a research summary, showing how educators and community members have created these schools. Because more than 50,000 people "downloaded" or purchased a copy of the original, 2001 report, the authors have revised and updated this edition. The report provides brief case studies of 22 public school buildings in 11 states: (1) Arizona; (2) California; (3) Colorado; (4) Connecticut; (5) Illinois; (6) Massachusetts; (7) Minnesota; (8) New York; (9) Ohio; (10) Rhode Island; and (11) Texas. These buildings house almost 50 schools and social service agencies. The profiles that follow represent urban, suburban, and rural communities throughout the United States. These schools serve a vast array of youngsters. They are united in their ability to improve achievement and behavior in safe, nurturing, stimulating environments. The key conclusions of this report are: (1) Smaller schools, on average, can provide: (1) a safer place for students; (2) a more positive, challenging environment; (3) higher achievement; (4) higher graduation rates; (5) fewer discipline problems; and (6) much greater satisfaction for families, students, and teachers; and (2) Schools that share facilities with other organizations can offer: (1) broader learning opportunities for students; (2) high quality services to students and their families; (3) higher student achievement and better graduation rates; and (4) ways to stretch and make more efficient use of tax dollars. (Contains 11 online resources.) [For first edition, "Smaller, Safer, Saner, Successful Schools," see ED455680.].

Making Large Schools Work

Making Large Schools Work
Author: Arthur Shapiro
Publisher: R&L Education
Total Pages: 210
Release: 2009-10-16
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1607091178

American schools are undergoing huge changes, among the most significant of which is that their size is increasing rapidly. This book lays out very practical approaches to making our ever-increasingly large schools work more effectively. By closely analyzing the advantages and disadvantages of large schools, the author can provide effective tools and strategies for dealing with them. Shapiro digs away at the foreseen and unforeseen consequences of this rapid escalation of size, and presents practical, tried-and-true strategies for undoing some of the more unfortunate results of this social trend or drift.

Professional School Counseling

Professional School Counseling
Author: Rosemary Thompson
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 590
Release: 2012-04-27
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 113583945X

Today’s children and adolescents are constantly facing new and unique challenges, and school counselors must respond to this by expanding their role and function within the schools. This revised and expanded edition of Thompson’s important text explores these issues, as well as the necessary steps school counselors need to take in order to adapt and effectively deal with them. Thompson advocates for the need for standards-based school counseling, outlining the framework and benefits of the ASCA National Model® and comprehensive guidance and counseling programs. She addresses the newest research in implementing evidence-based practices; the mental health issues that may be faced by children and adolescents; consulting with teachers, parents, administrators, and the community; and crisis intervention and management. New to this edition are chapters that focus on minority and disenfracnshised students and emphasize the need for school counselors to be able to advocate, coordinate, and collaborate on services for these students and their families. This is an essential resource for every school counselor in a time when the profession is becoming increasingly important.

The SAGE Handbook of Educational Leadership

The SAGE Handbook of Educational Leadership
Author: Fenwick W. English
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Total Pages: 473
Release: 2011-01-11
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1452261741

This fully updated Second Edition offers an unflinching and comprehensive overview of the full range of both practical and theoretical issues facing educational leadership today. Editor Fenwick W. English and 30 renowned authors boldly address the most fundamental and contested issues in the field, including culturally relevant and distributed leadership; critical policy and practice issues predicting the new century's conflict; the paradox of changes; and the promises, paradoxes, and pitfalls of standards for educational leaders.

What Americans Build and Why

What Americans Build and Why
Author: Ann Sloan Devlin
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 317
Release: 2010-05-31
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 0521734355

Examines five areas of Americans' built environment and looks at the relationships of size and scale to the way Americans live their lives.

Linking Architecture and Education

Linking Architecture and Education
Author: Anne Taylor
Publisher: UNM Press
Total Pages: 605
Release: 2009-05-16
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 0826334091

For the past forty years Anne Taylor has studied how schools, classrooms, playgrounds, homes, museums, and parks affect children and how they learn. As a result, she has developed a holistic, sustainable philosophy of learning environment design. She argues persuasively that architects must integrate their design knowledge with an understanding of the developmental needs of learners, while at the same time educators, parents, and students must broaden their awareness of the built, natural, and cultural environment to maximize the learning experience. In other words, schools and other environments can themselves become "three-dimensional textbooks." When architects are cognizant of newer models of education and educators view the environment as more than a box in which to teach prescribed lessons, the result is an informed architecture that enables children to discover the power of their own learning. The book presents numerous examples of dynamic designs that are the result of interdisciplinary understanding of place. Taylor includes designer perspectives, forums derived from commentary by outside contributors involved in school planning, and a wealth of photographs of thoughtful and effective solutions to create learning environments from comprehensive design criteria. Because the concept of "school" is enlarged to a community campus, the book also spawns a new model of teaching and learning. This book is essential reading for educators, architects, and community members who are anxious to transform education in America and elsewhere. "Anne Taylor is the most outstanding educator, leading proponent, and practitioner in the three-dimensional textbook field. Her work is the finest resource available for connecting students (young and old) to their learning environments, and visa versa."--Edward E. Kirkbride, NCARB, REFP "Before Western man divided the universe into discrete subject matter areas, the order in the universe was (and still is) both interdisciplinary and holistic. The branching of trees, spiraling of shells, meandering of streams, and the radial designs of flowers, for example, represent an analogy of mathematics, biology, and art. The current artificial separation of subject matter is in contrast to the way the world is constructed and the way children perceive it. Architecture and the study of the built, natural, and cultural environment synthesize the world of material things and the world of ideas. Further more, it helps us to realize that we are a part of not apart from the environment. This book is a tool and a gift to designers, educators, and students everywhere to assist them in seeing the meaning behind all that we view and use for living on earth. To know our precious relationship to our surroundings is the intent of this book. In this way, life is a work of art and each of us is an artist."--Anne Taylor

Small Schools, Big Ideas

Small Schools, Big Ideas
Author: Mara Benitez
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 437
Release: 2009-11-16
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0470615532

Small Schools, Big Ideas shows how the principle-based and equity-focused model from the Coalition of Essential Schools (CES) can be used to redesign existing schools and create new schools that prepare students for this century's challenges and opportunities. Filled with inspirational stories and illustrative examples from schools that have successfully implemented CES principles and practices, Small Schools, Big Ideas offers information and inspiration needed to: Transform schools in order to achieve equitable outcomes for all students Understand various school design options Establish school vision, mission, and goals to raise educational expectations and results Develop transformational leadership Cultivate a professional learning community Implement student-centered teaching, learning, and curricula Build productive relationships with families and communities Establish strategies for sustainability These recommendations and proven strategies can help educators transform their schools to become truly equitable, personalized, and academically challenging.

And Words Can Hurt Forever

And Words Can Hurt Forever
Author: James Garbarino
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2003-09-02
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 0743228995

Citing the pervasiveness of emotional violence in schools, a guide for parents and educators identifies how schools unwittingly support hostile environments and explains why listening to teens is a key to addressing all forms of violence.