The
just announced change to the "Blue Book", the annual school capacity and utilization report, to attribute the enrollment in
trailers or TCUs to the main building is a good one – and was recommended in
our report, Space Crunch.
But we still need to know how many
students are sitting in trailers – which DOE fails to report for
thousands of high school students, and an unknown number of elementary, middle
and District 75 students as well – especially if they plan to replace those seats.
Other
reforms that will be necessary in order to achieve a more accurate picture of
school overcrowding include:
· Providing a more reasonable number of cluster and specialty rooms for each school, in order to provide a well-rounded education;
· Ensuring that all students needing intervention or special education services can receive them in dedicated, appropriate spaces rather than in hallways or closets;
· Improving the formula so that when a school is forced to convert a library, science room, cafeteria, or auditorium to a classroom because of overcrowding, this does not increase the school’s listed capacity and register it as less overcrowded than before;
· Adjusting the formula so that a building with many co-located schools is allotted more room, in order to adjust to the difficulty of scheduling different classes and organizations in the shared spaces.
Only
through implementing these reforms can we begin to have a more accurate picture
of school utilization and assess how overcrowded our schools have truly become.
-- Leonie Haimson, Class Size Matters
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