No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top encouraged school Closings as a “reform,” but this turns out to be a destructive approach that hurts children and communities.
Rahm Emanuel and his hand-picked board in Chicago closed nearly 50 public schools in one day in 2013. That’s a record. One for the history books. That’s the kind of thinking that views people and children as objects, unimportant lives, easily discarded.
NEPC Publication: http://nepc.colorado.edu/publication/closures
William J. Mathis: (802) 383-0058, wmathis@sover.net
Gail L. Sunderman: (443) 932-1934, gsunderm@umd.edu
BOULDER, CO (May 18, 2017) – Federal and state school accountability policies have used standardized test results to shine a spotlight on low-performing schools. A remedy offered to “turn around” low-performance in school districts is the option to close the doors of the low-performing schools and send students elsewhere.
School Closure as a Strategy to Remedy Low Performance, authored by Gail L. Sunderman of the University of Maryland, and Erin Coghlan and Rick Mintrop of the University of California, Berkeley, investigates whether closing schools and transferring students for the purpose of remedying low performance is an effective option for educational decision makers to pursue.
Closing schools in response to low student performance is based on the premise that by closing low-performing schools and sending students to better-performing ones, student achievement will improve. The higher-performing schools, it is reasoned, will give transfer students access to higher-quality peer and teacher networks, which in turn will have a beneficial effect on academic outcomes. Moreover, it is argued that the threat of closure may motivate low-performing schools (and their districts) to improve.
To investigate this logic of closing schools to improve student performance, the authors drew on relevant peer-reviewed research and well-designed policy reports to answer four questions:
- How often do school closings occur and for what reasons?
- What is the impact on students of closing schools for reasons of performance?
- What is the impact of closing schools on the public school system in which closure has taken place?
- What is the impact of school closures on students of various ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds, and on local communities and neighborhoods?
Based on their analysis of the relevant available evidence the authors offer the following recommendations:
- Even though school closures have dramatically increased, jurisdictions largely shun the option of “closure and transfer” in the context of the federal School Improvement Grant (SIG) program. Policy and district actors should treat the infrequency of this turnaround option as a caution.
- School closures have at best weak and decidedly mixed benefits; at worst they have detrimental repercussions for students if districts do not ensure that seats at higher- performing schools are available for transfer students. In districts where such assignments are in short or uncertain supply, “closure and transfer” is a decidedly undesirable option.
- School closures seem to be a challenge for transferred students in non-academic terms for at least one or two years. While school closures are not advisable for a school of any grade span, they are especially inadvisable for middle school students because of the shorter grade span of such schools.
- The available evidence on the effects of school closings for their local system offers a cautionary note. There are costs associated with closing buildings and transferring teachers and students, which reduce the available resources for the remaining schools. Moreover, in cases where teachers are not rehired under closure-and-restart models, there may be broader implications for the diversity of the teaching workforce. Closing schools to consolidate district finances or because of declining enrollments may be inevitable at times, but closing solely for performance has unanticipated consequences that local and state decision makers should be aware of.
- School closures are often accompanied by political conflict. Closures tend to differentially affect low-income communities and communities of color that are politically disempowered, and closures may work against the demand of local actors for more investment in their local institutions.
In conclusion, school closure as a strategy for remedying student achievement in low-performing schools is at best a high-risk/low-gain strategy that fails to hold promise with respect to either increasing student achievement or promoting the non-cognitive well-being of students. The strategy invites political conflict and incurs hidden costs for both districts and local communities, especially low-income communities and communities of color that are differentially affected by school closings. It stands to reason that in many, if not most, instances, students, parents, local communities, district and state policymakers may be better off investing in persistently low-performing schools rather than closing them.
Find School Closure as a Strategy to Remedy Low Performance, by Gail L. Sunderman, Erin Coghlan and Rick Mintrop, at: http://nepc.colorado.edu/publication/closures

“No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top encouraged school Closings as a “reform,” but this turns out to be a destructive approach that hurts children and communities. ”
Turns out?
Who would ever have thunk?
Yet another example of the generally bassackwards approach to education reform.
One should have evidence of effectiveness and minimal downside BEFORE one ever does what are effectively large scale experiments on schools and communities that can affect the lives of thousands or even millions of people.
Education really needs to firmly reject this experiment on a large scale, then study the outcome approach
If engineers took this aporoach, they would try new bridge designs out on large numbers of people and see if the bridge collapsed.
It’s absurd.
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Not one of the “reforms” and “remedies” of NCLB and Race to (Mythical) Top had any evidence behind them.
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Great comparison with engineers/bridges. The comparison might continue with, “and when the bridge did collapse they would use manipulated statistics to prove that the collapse was the fault of the drivers and pedestrians using it.”
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Not much consideration has been given to school closures and the impact on students and communities. Poor students already suffer from economic insecurity, and school closures often exacerbate this instability. School closures have been a common means of moving out poor minorities in order to transform neighborhoods. Privatization has been a tool of gentrification. The fact that it does not improve educational opportunities for poor students has not been deterrent in this trend. Privatization has also allowed developers to open selective charter schools for middle class families that move into the area, and the resulting enhanced segregation is not a consideration as well. The goal is for the well connected developers to use privatization to clear a path so they can make lots of money from the redevelopment of the area.
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I could not help but think about the kid I knew in Elementary Stastitics class in the early 1980s. His small rural high school had been closed, sending all the kids in the community to a central county high school. This was the pervasive pattern chosen by rural counties which had experienced depopulation. Consolidation was considered the wave of the future. This kid I knew was very bitter at the closing of the school in his tiny community, even though he was aware of certain opportunities he received at the comprehensive high school.
In those days it was not reformers who closed schools, but school boards. Often they had no choice. Thriving rural communities had fallen victim to the mechanization of agriculture and rural de-population drove the consolidation of schools. The school where I teach now escaped this fate after a big battle in the county over the issue. We always felt like the underdogs who won despite odds.
Schools are often the last vestige of communities that are in some catastrophic cycle of change. Exacerbating this problem was always the height of stupidity.
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Roy, it is understandable to close a school because of underpopulation. In big cities, reformers close them to shake up the status quo, and because the kids are like ants to them.
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Yeah, & we have 2 of the big time school closers (who has closed more, is the question)
running for mayor in Chicago–Vallas & Rahm.
Chicago voter-educator-parents-community members: PLEASE get the word out about this toxic behavior to your relatives, friends & neighbors. So many people don’t know what they’ve done, how children, parents, educators & communities have been destroyed, all in the name of the public good, improving the schools, providing parent choice. WE all know it’s all smoke & mirrors. Putting either one of these guys in the mayor’s seat will mean years of disaster.
Please inform EVERYONE you know, & start today.
We can’t afford to lose any more public schools in Chicago, & entire communities suffer when we do.
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Closing a local school could potentially harm the community, especially those schools who provide services, such as after school enrichment, continuing education programs, and health care.
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