Urban school districts grapple with under-resourced schools, emotional closures in the face of plummeting enrollment
Sara Randazzo and Matt Barnum:
Solis’s closure is an omen of what could be coming to more schools in Los Angeles and cities across the country. And it reflects a difficult-to-sustain dynamic: too many schools for too few students.
As birthrates have dipped, families have moved elsewhere, and public school alternatives have grown, many urban districts have hemorrhaged students. That has left officials with the difficult choice of keeping open shrinking schools with resources spread thin or shutting them down, a move that inevitably garners fierce community backlash. How school leaders navigate this challenge could define urban school systems for the next several years.
Schools in Los Angeles are shrinking
Many LAUSD schools have fewer students enrolled since 2010
Choose life.