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School Design > Learning Structures
Resources for Learning More About Smaller Learning Community Structures and Strategies
Type: Horace Resource Page
Source: Horace. Vol.19, #1. Fall 2002.
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United States Department of Education Smaller Learning Communities Program
In its third year, the Smaller Learning Communities grant program invites
high schools with a thousand or more students to submit proposals to receive
funding for initiatives to create or expand smaller learning communities.
With a total of $142 million in funding, the program awards both one-year
planning and three-year implementation grants. The Smaller Learning Communities
web site notes that applications will be available for upcoming funding
in late fall 2002. The web site includes project summaries from past grant
recipients, examples of successful proposals, links to research demonstrating
the beneWts of small learning communities, and a focused, useful list
of structures and strategies for downsizing that schools have used effectively.
The program is not scheduled to be funded in 2003, so if it's appropriate
to your school and district, act now.
web site: www.ed.gov/offices/OESE/SLCP/
telephone: 1-800-USA-LEARN
Big Picture Company's Learning Through Internships (LTI) Curriculum
The Big Picture Company's curriculum material, listed as Big Picture
Company Curriculum Materials (for students) and Big Picture Company Curriculum
Books 1,2 3 and 4 (for teachers), provide a framework for creating school
structure around individualized curriculum and learning through opportunities
outside of traditional academic paths. The student material features self-exploration
workbooks designed to help students determine their interests; the teacher
material details the LTI philosophy, methods for teachers to help students
determine their interests and skills, and how to set up internships and
work with mentors. The Big Picture Company provides numerous worksheets,
downloadable guides and other information, provided with the reminder
that "there's no need to start from scratch." These resources
are invaluable to schools contemplating ways to individualize student
experience.
web site: www.bigpicture.org/materials.htm
telephone: 401/456-0600 fax: 401/456-0606
mailing address: The Big Picture Company, 275 Westminster Street, Suite
500, Providence, RI 02903
New Small Learning Communities: Findings from Recent Literature"
Kathleen Cotton, Research Associate at the Northwest Regional Educational
Laboratory, released this small schools research review in December 2001.
Focusing on small schools research conducted since her seminal 1996 study,
"School Size, School Climate, and Student Performance," Cotton's
newest study quickly emerged as the sine qua non of small schools research
overviews. It's a must-read. Particularly useful are a list of deWnitions
of types of small schools, a collection of online resources and an annotated
list of references. Cotton died in July 2002; small schools educators
and researchers mourn her passing and are grateful for the work she leaves
for countless students' beneWt.
web site: www.nwrel.org/scpd/sirs/nslc.pdf
Small Schools Workshop Listserv
The University of Illinois at Chicago's Small School Workshop sponsors
this active email group focused on small schools events, news stories
and questions. Anyone is welcome to join and participate. It's an excellent
source for staying up-to-the minute on news, conferences and concerns
related to smaller learning communities. And don't miss the extensive
Small Schools Workshop website at
www.smallschoolsworkshop.org.
website: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smallschools/
Please note that Yahoo requires that you register on their site to access
this email group.
Small Schools Project
Set aside a few hours, if you can, before immersing yourself in the Small
Schools Project website. Part of the Center on Reinventing Public Education
at the University of Washington's Daniel J. Evans School of Public
Affairs and supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the
Small Schools Project focuses on helping schools create, strengthen and
sustain their downsizing effort. Working both within Washington state
and nationwide, the Project matches schools with coaches, sponsors conferences
and workshops, helps schools connect with other regional allies, and publishes
research and information about small learning communities. Don't
miss the Tools for Schools section of the site, stunning in its breadth
and utility.
web site: www.smallschoolsproject.org
email: info@smallschoolsproject.org
telephone: 206/616-0303
fax: 206/543-8250
mailing address: Small Schools Project, 7900 East Greenlake Drive North,
Suite 212, Seattle, WA 98103
The Rural School and Community Trust
The Rural School and Community Trust is devoted to helping schools and
community groups in rural areas nationwide. Focusing particularly on "those
rural places distressed by historic patterns of poverty and racism or
stressed by declines in population, major changes in population composition
and fundamental economic change," the Trust has a unique, deep perspective
on the effects of school district consolidation and the natural edge that
rural, already-small schools have in taking advantage of the beneWts of
smallness. See the site's Small Schools Policy Issue section for
information connected to small, rural schools, with a particular focus
on research that demonstrates that "smaller schools reduce the damaging
effects of poverty on student achievement and help students from poorer
communities narrow the achievement gap between them and students from
wealthier communities."
web site: www.ruraledu.org/index.cfm
email: info@ruraledu.org
telephone: 202/955-7177
fax: 202/955-7179
mailing address: Rural School and Community Trust National Office, 1825
K Street NW,Suite 703, Washington, DC 20006
This resource last updated: March 11, 2003
Database Information:
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Source: Horace. Vol.19, #1. Fall 2002.
Publication Year: 2002
Publisher: CES National
School Level: All
Issue: 19.1
Focus Area: School Design
STRAND: School Design: learning structures
Learning Structures: Small Learning Communities
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