EdWorld Internet Topics

Article Guide
 
Previous Article Back Up Next Article

Related Reviews
--National Foundation for the Improvement of Education
--Urban Education Web

Related Categories
-- Administration Resources

Related Articles

Other Articles This Week




Our Top 5
School Issues Features

Article Archive
Issues Glossary
No Ed Left Behind
Regina Barreca
Wire Side Chats
Cooking with Joy

More School Issues Features
Ed News Headlines
Fit To Be Taught
In A Sub’s Shoes
Lessons from Schools
NCLB Updates
Read About It
School Doodles
Soapbox
Starr Points
Teach For America Diaries
Teaming Up To Achieve Turnaround Tales
Weekly Survey
Whatever It Takes

School Issues Archives
Assessment
Class Size
Community Involvement
Grouping & Scheduling
Improvement
Safety
Rural Education
School Choice
School to Work
Special Education
Urban Education

More School Issues Resources
Free Headlines Newsletter

Visit Our
Other Channels


Article Archive
Free LP Newsletter
Holiday Lessons
Lesson of the Day
Work Sheet Library
See more...


Article Archive
Meet Our Columnists
Reading Room
Strategies That Work
Teacher Features
See more...


Article Archive
Free Admin Newsltr
Admin Columnists
Ideas Library
PR for PRincipals
See more...


Article Archive
Sites to See
Tech Lesson of Week
Tech Team Articles
Techtorial How-To's
See more...





A+ Site Reviews
Advertising Info
Contact Us
EDmin Planning Center
Education Standards
Financial Tips
Free Newsletters
Message Boards
Subjects/Specialties
Tips Library
Tools & Templates
See more...
Featured Programs
   E-Learning

Home > School Issues Channel > Archives > Improvement & Safety > School Issues Article

SCHOOL ISSUES ARTICLE

NEA Calls for Modernizing Nation's Schools


Share School Issues Center Logo A National Education Association report calls for $322 billion to modernize the nation's schools. A bipartisan bill proposes loaning $24.8 billion in interest-free bonds for states and school systems to repair and renovate deteriorating and overcrowded schools.

Fixing up our nation's crowded, deteriorating, and Internet unfriendly schools will cost nearly $322 billion, according to Modernizing Our Schools: What Will It Cost?, a draft report recently published by the National Education Association (NEA).

The report's estimate is based on the collection and analysis of research literature, research databases, the NEA's annual survey, analysis of state school-financing legislation, and a comprehensive questionnaire sent to NEA research affiliates. The NEA determined that $268.2 billion is needed for school infrastructures and $53.7 billion for education technology.

Leaking roofs, asbestos removal, modern technology, and new classrooms cost money -- and the price is going up. It's nearly triple an estimate the U.S. General Accounting Office made in 1995, which found our nation's schools needed $112 billion for repairs and modernization. At that time, the report found that nearly one-third of all schools needed extensive repair or replacement, nearly 60 percent of schools had at least one major building problem, and more than half had inadequate environmental conditions.

Not much was done to address those needs during the 1990s, which is a primary reason the costs for infrastructure improvements have increased substantially, according to the NEA report. Schools deteriorated as they continued to age. The average school in our nation is 42 years old; 28 percent of schools are more than 50 years old.

The nation's schools are in disrepair, and growing enrollments contribute to the need for new school construction and building additions. A 1999 Department of Education report, The Baby Boom Echo Continues, forecasts that by 2009, total public and private school enrollment will rise by 4.7 million, up to a record of 54.2 million students.

A new high school costs $18 million to construct and an elementary school costs about $7 million.

BIPARTISAN CONSTRUCTION BILL WILL HELP

The high cost to fix-up our nation's schools prompted Rep. Nancy L. Johnson (R-Connecticut) to offer legislation that would support school districts and states with federal money. "She just recognized a real need to modernize our nation's schools," Johnson's press secretary David White told Education World.

Johnson teamed up with Rep. Charles B. Rangel (D-New York) to introduce a bipartisan compromise, America's Better Classroom Act (HR 4094), on March 21, 2000. The bill, modeled after President William Clinton's school construction proposal, would loan $24.8 billion to states and school districts to repair, renovate, and build new schools with interest-free, 15-year bonds.

Although the bill has more than 150 Democratic and Republican cosponsors, there is uncertainty when it will be introduced or whether it will be offered as an amendment or stand-alone bill, White said. The bill lost some of its momentum in March when sponsors intended to offer it as an amendment to the Education Savings Account bill. House leadership pulled that bill, leaving no current legislation to attach the construction bill to.

BILL OFFERS NEW OPPORTUNITIES

If Congress eventually approves the construction bill, school districts will have the opportunity chance to improve on school designs. A new U.S. Department of Education report, Schools as Centers of Community: A Citizen's Guide for Planning and Design, offers examples of innovative school designs, incorporating suggestions on how to create schools that are also community centers.

The renovation of existing schools and new construction may also give communities an opportunity to reverse the current trends of building super-sized schools. Education experts say such buildings hinder the social and academic success of students and that smaller, more personal schools do a better job. Some school psychologists also suggest small schools can help administrators control school violence.

With rising construction costs, after nearly half a decade of little to no school construction and renovation, an increasing number of school districts have been doing exactly the opposite -- they continue to merge school districts to create even bigger high school complexes.

The National Association of Secondary School Principals suggests that the ideal high school should have a maximum of 600 students. About 71 percent of children attend schools with at least 1,000 students; the number of students attending schools with more than 1,500 students doubled from 1990 to 1998.

The hardest-hit school districts, which struggle to squeeze in more and more students, are large, urban school districts, according to a government report, The Baby Boom Echo, No End in Sight. New York City; Dade County, in Florida; and Los Angeles are examples of districts with many schools and too many students.

Overcrowding isn't a problem only for the nation's large urban cities. Suburban school districts surrounding Atlanta, Georgia, and Washington, D.C., have also experienced rapid growth.

"There can be no dispute about the critical need to address school infrastructure needs across this country," said U.S. Secretary of Education Richard Riley in a statement about the proposed legislation. "This is a great step forward, and I truly appreciate the fact that these two leaders in the cause of school modernization have rolled up their sleeves and developed this pragmatic consensus legislation."

Diane Weaver Dunne
Education World®
Copyright © 2000 Education World

Related Articles from Education World

Please check out our featured articles this week:

05/17/2000

 
 



Fundraisers & Fundraising Ideas:
Earn 90% Profit!

Leading Trade and
Vocational Career
savings.


Online Degree Directory

Walden University
M.S. in Education
Degrees Online


Online Schools
University Degrees
College Programs


Grants for Public
& Private Schools
Free Information


APUS
Online Degree
For Educators





Copyright 1996-2009 by Education World, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Home | About Us | Reprint Rights | Help | Site Guide | Partners | Contact Us | Privacy Policy