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What to do with middle school

A video on the growing dilemma of how to successfully educate middle schoolers discusses doing away with middle schools altogether.  One possibility is to keep students in elementary school through the 8th grade.  Another choice is to house 6th through 12th graders together.   The article on nytimes.com describes schools that are taking the leap and moving away from the middle school experience.

Should the nurturing cocoon of elementary school be extended for another three years, shielding 11-year-olds from the abrupt transition to a new school, with new students and teachers, at one of the most volatile times in their lives?

Paul Vallas, chief executive of the Philadelphia school system, thinks so, and he has closed 17 traditional middle schools since 2002, while converting some three dozen elementary schools into K-8s. “The fifth to sixth grade transition is just too traumatic,” he said. “At a time when children are undergoing emotional, physical, social changes, and when they need stability and consistency, suddenly they’re thrust into this alien environment.”

The 6th- through 12th-grade school is less common, and less studied. In New York City, where such schools have proliferated — 38 have opened since 2002 — the shift is being driven largely by nonprofit organizations that have helped start new, small schools. These schools are under pressure to show they can produce better results than traditional ones.

In many ways these schools were conceived less as a solution to the middle school problem than as solutions to the high school problem — that is, the problem of having just four years to work magic with woefully underprepared freshmen.

It sounds to me like we might be heading back to the one room school house.  I would be concerned for the younger students in either scenario.  They might hear and see things that are way beyond their years.   

Posted: Friday, February 23, 2007 3:47 PM by Betty

Comments

dalmom said:

I live and teach in Philadelphia.  There is a recent study that did not find improved "achievement" (e.g. test scores) in K-8 schools.  I know some elementary teachers that resent the K-8 push because there is no support for adding the grades other than more teachers.  Philly has some charter 6 - 12 schools which, as you wrote, are to get students pre 9th grade so the high school push is less dramatic (and possible.)  

Philly use to have K-6, 7-9 and 10 -12.  This may be another option if, as Vallas stated, the 5 - 6 transition is too difficult.  

# February 28, 2007 9:29 AM

Ginseng said:

I'm amused at, once again, the search for the ultimate solution of how to handle kids' education needs in ages 11 - 14.

I teach 7th grade.  My team leader said, the other day, "It's just a rotten time in their lives.  How many kids have we seen come back and visit us from high school and, lo and behold, they're normal.  It's just a bad time in their lives."

Repeat: it's a stinky time in their lives.

If I "ran the zoo" this is what I would do:

* Required reading and math exit exams to pass to the next grade.  

* Every day all kids would speed-walk laps around the track.  

* Manditory classical music during lunch.  Manditory 5 minutes of silence at the end of lunch.  

* All kids must take turns sweeping the hallway at the end of each day.

# March 2, 2007 9:37 PM

MrsJohnson said:

Interesting video.  Thanks for sharing.  It has me thinking.

# March 9, 2007 3:14 PM
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