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Shutter the hometown school?
úThe hardest animal to kill in Illinois is a school mascotî
by John Kelly
Phyllis
Hopwood sent all six of her children to Steward Elementary School.
She has taught her neighbors children in the tiny schoolhouse
for almost three decades. So it is difficult for her to watch what
is happening to Steward.
The
surrounding farms of Lee County in the northwest corner of the state,
which for decades supplied the school with students, are growing
larger and supporting fewer families. Couples with children are
chasing jobs in bigger cities. Young adults, whose kids might someday
fill these halls, instead graduate, leave and rarely return to settle
here.
Steward
is shrinking. This year, there are 97 students in nine grades. By
2005, enrollment could dip below 80.
A
school means everything to a small town like this, Hopwood
says. This place is what keeps the community together.
However
disheartening, reality is similar for prairie towns all over Illinois.
Census 2000 numbers show people are fleeing the once-vibrant farming
communities of the Midwest.
An
analysis of the census count and enrollment figures indicates that,
over the next few years, small districts that have long resisted
merging with large districts in nearby cities may be left with little
choice.
Illinois
has 249 school districts serving fewer than 500 students. The latest
census figures show that in more than 200 of those districts, about
80 percent, the number of school-age children within those districts
borders will drop by 2005. In 32 districts, the number of potential
pupils could drop more than 20 percent.
Experts
say the sagging numbers and the diminishing tax dollars that go
with them will force dozens, even hundreds, of tiny districts into
a fate they avoided for decades: consolidation, which could someday
mean a far-off school board will decide to shutter the hometown
school.
Its
the last vestige for these commun-ities, says former state
schools Superintendent Robert Leininger. The elevator closed.
The gas station shut down. But theyve still got their high
school. If they lose that, some people believe they lose their identity.
Educators
and residents from small districts contend they want to keep what
theyve got: incredibly low student-to-teacher ratios, relatively
few discipline problems and local decision-making. There is no talk
of merger in Steward.
What
we do is what a lot of larger districts are trying to emulate,
says Steward Principal Colette Sutton.
But
Leininger and other longtime educators say pride too often prevents
withering rural districts from seeing the positive side to consolidation
until students and taxpayers are suffering.
The
hardest animal to kill in Illinois is a school mascot, says
Max Pierson, a former school superintendent who now teaches at Western
Illinois University in Macomb and prepares consolidation studies
for districts across the state.
Local
resistance is one reason Illinois has the most fractured public
school system in the United States. Illinois system is the
fifth-largest in the country in number of students, but has more
districts (891) than all but two states:
California
with 1,048 and Texas with 1,041. Texas has twice Illinois
2 million pupils. California has three times as many.
This
states ranking comes after a half century of mergers. Illinois
had 12,000 school districts in the 1940s, about 2,000 a decade later
and less than 900 now. Dozens more are looking into consolidation
because of enrollment dips, financial strains or a combination of
both.
Examples
of shrinking school systems can be found in every corner of the
state, from northwestern Illinois to the Ohio River. Otter Creek-Hyatt
District in LaSalle County, already the smallest in the state, was
home to 51 children old enough to attend school last year; the number
could be 29 in 2005.
McClellan
District 12, near Mt. Vernon, could drop from 105 school-age residents
to 61 in that same time frame.
In
Ogle County, just north of Steward, the Kings districts pool
of potential pupils could fall from 155 to 105.
We
get bubbles, but we have sustainability, says Kings Superintendent
Lynn Dewey. One year, well graduate a large class and
a small kindergarten class comes in. Another year, we graduate a
small class and get a larger incoming kindergarten class. So our
numbers stay about the same.
No,
people in places such as Kings and Steward are not talking about
consolidation. They are planning for the future.
Just
three years ago, Steward voters approved a tax hike to rebuild the
K-8 school without a dime in state construction aid. Parts of the
job were done with donated materials and labor.
The
project combined a state-of-the-art facility with historic sections
of the old school, including the gymnasium. Despite the shiny new
walls, walking through Stewards halls is like visiting another
era. Parents flow in and out constantly, each greeted by first name
by whichever staffer spots them first.
The
fourth and fifth grades share one classroom and one teacher, Mrs.
Hopwood. In the cafeteria, a lone cook prepares a home-style meal
for a few dozen students. A traveling music teacher leads half the
band here, the other half at another school miles away.
Principal
Sutton says her students get the same curricular, and extracurricular,
opportunities as kids in big-city schools with some added
bonuses. For example, everyone can play on sports teams because
the school needs all the players it can get.
The
biggest bonus is personal attention. One reading class had a teacher
working one-by-one with her nine students, the kind of quality teaching
time urban and suburban teachers dream of.
We
chose this for our children for a reason, says Phyllis Hopwood.
Theyve all ended up being successful.
Sutton
says school officials are optimistic about future enrollment, too.
Steward got one new student in the past year. The childs father
drives more than an hour to work in the far western Chicago suburbs.
Shes convinced enough people will choose Steward and its quiet
lifestyle that the school will remain viable.
However,
education researchers such as Leininger and Pierson say small districts
need to look beyond keeping just enough kids to hang on and instead
focus on the quality and cost of education.
Researchers
say curriculum can be limited in some smaller districts, which may
lack resources for foreign language courses, computer training or
up-to-date science labs. Instructors may have to teach outside their
fields of expertise. Some do not have enough money to offer extracurricular
activities such as music, art or football teams.
There
is a financial cost, too. State Board of Education statistics show
Illinois districts with 500 or more students spend 3 percent of
their budgets on administrative costs, such as superintendents
salaries. Those costs are double, about 7 percent, in districts
with 500 or fewer students and 11 percent in districts with 200
or fewer students.
Leininger
points to some counties where a single high school draws students
from a half-dozen or more independent elementary districts within
a short drive, each with its own buildings and superintendents.
Why
not have one superintendent? The system is inefficient and ineffective,
Leininger says.
Available
statistics show no pattern of higher tax rates in smaller districts.
Nor is there reliable data to determine whether mergers result in
lower property tax rates. Pierson and Leininger say thats
because the money saved still needs to be spent but now it
can be spent in the classroom.
Leininger
has a high-profile opportunity to push a statewide reorganization
of districts. He chairs a committee studying school funding for
the State Board of Education. The groups final report likely
will identify consolidation as one way for the state to get more
out of its education dollars, he says.
The
former state schools chief jokes that he still has battle
scars from debates during the 1980s over statewide consolidation.
The idea was killed by political leaders facing incredible opposition
from all corners: rural towns, Chicago suburbs and union leaders
whose members might lose jobs because of mergers.
The
time may be more favorable now, Pierson says. The state faces a
widespread shortage of teachers and superintendents. Mergers may
reduce the number of education jobs, but that can be a good thing
when there are not enough candidates for the jobs anyway, he says.
Besides,
barring a sudden shift in rural population trends, consolidation
is going to happen anyway. Leininger says it should be planned carefully
on a regional basis, rather than crisis-by-crisis in individual
districts.
Many
districts that have reorganized had to because of a lack of students,
Leininger says. Theres no question there is going to
be some natural consolidation, but I dont think we can just
wait around for it to happen.
John
Kelly is a special assignment reporter for The Associated Press in
Chicago, where he covers Illinois state government and statewide issues.
Illinois
Issues, March 2002
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