At the Council hearings today, DOE officials vociferously opposed the class size bill, Intro 2374, saying it would be "extremely disruptive" to schools. Yet others, including Regent Kathleen Cashin, Diane Ravitch and Elsie Thompson McCabe, CEO of the Mission Society, one of NYC's oldest social service organizations, said reducing class size would be the most powerful thing we could do to improve our schools and outcomes for NYC students. My written testimony is here; Diane's is below.
Diane Ravitch’s testimony in support of Intro 2374, the bill to lower class size
October 27, 2021
Chairman Treyger, thank you for the opportunity to speak today.
I am a historian
of education. My first book was a history of the NYC public schools.
As a
historian, I have studied reform in NYC and in cities across the nation.
Reform
usually means shaking up the system. Centralize, decentralize, recentralize.
Reorganize the bureaucracy, put the mayor in control, change the decision-making
structure. Hire consultants, hire data analysts, hire coaches.
Or reform means outsource the schools to private
entrepreneurs.
Or reform
means more standardized testing. Interim assessments, test prep. Testing and
more testing. More testing does not produce more learning or better grades.
These so-called
reforms barely move the needle, if at all.
Class size
reduction is a far more powerful reform than any of the above.
Grades improve, discipline improves. Teacher
morale improves.
Children get
the attention they need. Class size reduction is especially valuable for the
children with the greatest needs.
With smaller
classes, teachers have the time they need to do their jobs.
Chairman
Treyger, you are right. Reform begins with the needs of children, not the
limits of space.
Class size
reduction is the most powerful reform you can enact.
3 comments:
Major beef: Large classes perpetuate passive learning.
Marion Brady
Class size makes a tremendous difference for Teachers being able to reach and assist more students!
A small class allows the teacher to reach every child. This way it makes it easy for the teacher to identify and promptly address each child's learning weaknesses, strengths, and needs. Since the workload is also small, a smaller class gives the teacher morale as well.
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