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We took a look at Middle Schools in our Annual Report. Here's what it says:
Though grades 7 and 8 are formally a part of the elementary school curriculum, and their teachers are in elementary sections of teachers’ federations, these grades are considered transition years. Researchers and educators across North America agree that these grades are key to student success, and are a “stumbling point” for many students.
In the United States, many school boards are moving away from the “middle school” model, because researchers have found a drop in student achievement in those years. In the U.S., the most common move is back to Kindergarten to Grade 8 schools, but some researchers find value in moving these students into high schools.
They say that in high school, the young teenagers have people to look up to, they are forced to look forward to the future, and they are more connected to the continuum from success in Grades 7 and 8, to graduation from high school. They also say that high schools tend to have more specialized classroom space (better science labs etc.) and students are more likely to have access to specialist teachers.
On the other hand, parents stay more involved in Kindergarten to Grade 8 schools, which supports students’ success, and Grades 7 and 8 students in elementary schools can act as leaders in the school.
Whichever way it’s done, there seems to be agreement that it is definitely better for students to change schools less often.
Declining enrolment is forcing boards to make decisions about 7 and 8 schools. Ironically, those decisions might just end up making things better for students in the long run. I think when our kids are young it's hard to imagine them in with all those huge high school students - but it might not really be so bad. As a parent of one high school student and one university student, I know now that they survive; and that they survive exposure to all sorts of things and influences. And now that I've survived most of it, I can see the value in letting them grow up, in letting go, and in the independence and responsibility that might come with going into a building with older students.
Which is not to say that staying in the elementary school is a bad idea either. But....
Maybe, really, we should be looking to Finland - which does better than any other country on all the international educational comparisons - where the kids stay in one school until they're sixteen. Then they have to make huge choices about their direction.
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