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EDITORIAL: Breaking up is hard to do

Big district, big schools, big problems

Is bigger always better?

Supporters of the Clark County School District apparently think so.


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  • But in the wake of two school-related shootings near local high schools in the past few weeks, it's worth pointing out that huge schools -- often the creatures of massive school districts -- bring inherent problems associated with serious pathologies.

    For instance, in a 2003 publication, researcher Eric Larsen found that "school enrollment size is positively related to the prevalence of serious violence."

    Similarly, in the 2002 paper "How Smaller Schools Prevent School Violence," Michael Klonsky concludes, "Simply stated, small schools obliterate anonymity -- the handmaiden of many forms of youth violence -- and create an environment where students are visible to those charged with their education and many aspects of their school and cultural development -- their teachers."

    This research is not controversial.

    The recent shootings involved students at Palo Verde High School (the district's largest, with 3,458 students) and Western High School (enrollment: 2,371). And these student populations are not out of the ordinary. Every single public high school in the Las Vegas area -- not counting magnet schools, specialized academies or schools in outlying areas -- houses at least 2,200 kids.

    Even many local middle schools top 1,500 students.

    Some will argue this is an issue of growth and money, and that's a legitimate point.

    Let's not pretend, however, that these enrollment figures are divorced from the fact that the Clark County School District is now the nation's fifth-largest, stretching from Mesquite to Primm, from Indian Springs to Laughlin and covering everything in between.

    Breaking up this behemoth into a number of separate districts might eventually render obsolete the one-size-fits-all model that now rules Clark County, leading to experimentation and change -- whether it comes to union contracts, financial matters, instructional policies or campus sizes.

    It's an idea that must no longer be so cavalierly dismissed.

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    Greg Maher wrote on March 04, 2008 08:05 AM: We moved to Henderson from NW Las Vegas ten years ago. The primary purpose of this move was to establish ourselves in the henderosn area schools. With two young girls, our interest was for thier education and safety. At the time there was much discussion in the State regarding the Henderson schools breaking away. As I recall, it was rejected through the powerful forces played on the notion by CCSD, Unions and others. The time is past due. BREAK UP THIS MONSTER!!! Before another incident and we parents stand around looking at each other asking WHY!!


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    Robert Gardner wrote on March 03, 2008 05:51 PM: Smaller school districts would help reduce classroom size as concerned parents, teachers, and politicians rally to the idea with the necessary money to make it so in the smaller district which serves a smaller constituency; Mesquite taxes would stay in Mesquite, never entering the black hole that is the CCSD. Some cost reduction would come from adjusting the bloated administration budget. Another amount may come from reducing the massive and expensive special schools which serve administration egos; special schooling is what college study is all about and it is not necessary for a government taxpayer funded district. Some money would come from better placement of school campuses serving specific areas year after year without the reckless annual rezoning that is so often used by CCSD and so despised by the parents and children effected thereby. Wouldn’t it be nice to actually know the school district members and the superintendent by name and see them regularly in their community? The CCSD is so large now that the Superintendent can hide behind layers of his own “bureaucratic policy” with a school board has the same accessibility as the County Commission. A smaller district probably bids for better teachers with increasing salary levels too. One thing is for certain---so long as it remains the bloated CCSD---I will vote no for any additional bond money; I don’t trust the District to spend $9.5 BILLION wisely.


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    Kenneth Zelasko wrote on March 02, 2008 08:34 AM: Your editorial writer stated: "Breaking up this behemoth into a number of separate districts might eventually render obsolete the one-size-fits-all model that now rules Clark County, leading to experimentation and change -- whether it comes to union contracts, financial matters, instructional policies or campus sizes."

    It is not credible to say on the one hand if the school district would be broken into smaller districts that the schools would be smaller, too. That's an error in logic.... I can't believe your editorial writer would say something as illogical as that. Breaking up the school district would not create smaller schools. Now if you want smaller schools, the district's bond issue would have to triple from $9.5 billion to over $28 billion..... and I could almost see your editorial writers aiming their guns at the school board and its administration on that request.


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    FastTracker wrote on March 01, 2008 03:19 PM: Chris:

    'School choice already exists.'??

    Like, do you want to be shot, or just hung out to dry?

    Could it be that other, more viable options for education are evolving?

    Maybe it's time for you to think outside YOUR box.


    Report abuse

    Seth wrote on March 01, 2008 12:53 PM: Do not break up the Clark County School district.
    Then you would have to get rid of half of the high priced administrators.
    And you really do not want to upset the school district administrators union.


    Report abuse

    Chris wrote on March 01, 2008 12:36 PM: School choice already exists. Don't like your public school? Work the system to change it (this is what the editorial is advocating) or move. That's choice. The fact of the matter is that NCLB already mandates some degree of school choice, but most opt not to make use of it because they don't want their kids going to schools far from home.


    Report abuse

    Helen Weils wrote on March 01, 2008 09:44 AM: The answer is to support Chuck Muth's
    school choice ballot initiative and allow parents the right to put their children where they want to and eliminate the educrat monopoly.


    Report abuse

    FastTracker wrote on March 01, 2008 08:27 AM: The time has come to implement serious school choice.

    Provide vouchers to parents whose children meet or exceed standards for their age in the three r's: reading, writing and arithmetic.

    Allow those who home school to participate.

    With this kind of innovation, Clark County could set a path for the nation, to the advantage of everyone . . . except the entrenched educational establishment.


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    Larry wrote on March 01, 2008 08:20 AM: Two off-campus shootings in a district that serves more than 300,000 students is ample reason to initiate the massive effort, expense, and turmoil that would be associated with breaking up the CCSD?
    Where is the evidence that breaking up a large school district leads to smaller schools?
    What is that odor we smell while reading today's RJ editorial?
    Me thinks its mental flatulence.


    Report abuse

    BR wrote on March 01, 2008 08:05 AM: First, get illegals out of the system.


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