Smaller is better
Andrew Wainer
As Ocean View High School freshmen settle into their desks during English
courses this school year they are likely to notice something is missing
-- half the class.
Classroom size reduction programs in ninth-grade English classes at Ocean
View and Marina high schools have capped the number of students in each
class at 20 for the first time in the district’s history.
And students, teachers and administrators say in this case, more is not
better.
“I immediately noticed a different dynamic in the classroom,” Ocean View
English teacher Jim Sebring said as his class divided into groups for
cooperative work. “Kids seemed much more settled and calm.”
The program, instituted with the help of state and federal funds, has
been a boon for the 27 year teaching veteran. “Kids are able to get more
writing assignments done because the time between completing a paper and
grading it is so much shorter with half the number of students,” Sebring
said excitedly. “I get to know the kids twice as quick as before. There
is no question that the reduction has been an advantage.”
Ocean View High School Principal Karen Gilden echoes Sebring’s
sentiments.
“The reduction has helped new teachers ease into teaching positions, and
has helped veteran staff who are accustomed to teaching classes double
the size,” she said.
Although the district has not yet formally assessed the program’s
success, Gilden says feedback has been overwhelmingly positive. Teachers
cite less paperwork, more contact with students and better discipline as
some of the advantages of the program.
Ocean View plans to conduct its own formal surveys of the program near
the end of the school year.
But whatever assessment conclusions the district comes up with, it is
clearly popular among the school’s most important sector -- students.
“I like the new classes better. There is more one-on-one contact with the
teacher,” lanky 15-year-old Phil Hann said.
Katie Tanner, 14, agreed: “Teachers spend a little more time with all
the students in these classes.”
But in spite of the kudos from students and administrators, funding for
the reduction program, like so much in public education, depends on the
whims of politicians in Sacramento.
Gilden keeps a guarded optimism about the future of class reduction
programs. “We are on year-to-year funding so there is no guarantee that
it will continue next year,” she said. “But right now the state
legislature is supportive of educational programs.”
Sebring will enjoy the new set-up while it lasts. “Its future,” he
shrugs, “is out of our hands.”
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