Clarke needs classrooms?

As student population grows, so does need for sixth-grade classrooms

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OST photo by AMY HANSEN This is a view of Ruby Clyde's sixth-grade classroom at Clarke Community Elementary School. Clyde has 28 students in her class.

Where does sixth grade belong?

Are sixth-grade students better situated at the elementary school or, maturity wise, do they belong at the middle school?

That's the million-dollar question because, right now, Clarke Community School District is growing.

The topic of Clarke needing classrooms in the near future was discussed during a Nov. 27 school-board meeting.

Clarke Elementary Principal Brandon Eighmy said there are 100 students in sixth grade this year, and fifth grade is a little less than 100.

"Our primary side is well over 100, closer to 115," he said. "We just added another first-grader today."

Superintendent Ned Cox said, as students head toward the secondary education building, once they get into seventh through 12th grade, they are divided up differently.

Ratios

He mentioned the importance of keeping class ratios low to aid in education.

"Once we get that many kids to move up in fifth and sixth grade, we have to hire more fifth- and sixth-grade teachers to keep the ratio low," Cox said. "If you don't want to have the ratio be low, they don't need any more space. Just cram them all in the same classroom. But, I think we all know around the table that, you know, you get a better product with kids if you've got a smaller class size."

The issue of classroom space is an elementary-school problem. For the foreseeable future, the middle and high schools have the space needed for continued growth.

To put the difference in class sizes into perspective, the biggest grade in the high school has 106 students. The smallest grade, which is the sophomore class, has 79 students.

According to Eighmy, the elementary school still has some grades that are approximately 100 or less in the middle grades of the elementary school, but the sixth-grade rooms are full.

As for the current preschoolers the school district serves, Eighmy said there will most likely be more than 100 kindergarten students next school year.

This will be the third year in a row kindergarten has had more than 100 students.

What's needed?

In a perfect world, Cox said, the district needs six classrooms and a saferoom added to the middle school if sixth grade is moved to the building. The saferoom could serve as a lunchroom or practice room, as well as a shelter for tornadoes.

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