Reducing class size is an approach to managing the ratio between students and teachers, as it is suggested that the range of approaches a teacher can employ and the amount of attention each student will receive will increase as the number of students per teacher becomes smaller.
1. Reducing class size has a small positive impacts of +2 month, on average. The majority of studies examine reductions of 10 students. Small reductions in class size (for example, from 30 to 25 students) are unlikely to be cost-effective relative to other strategies.
2. There is some evidence for additional benefits of smaller class sizes with younger children, so smaller class sizes may be a more effective approach during the early stages of primary school.
3. Smaller classes only impact upon learning if the reduced numbers allow teachers to teach differently â for example, having higher quality interactions with students or minimising disruption.
4. The gains from smaller class sizes are likely to come from the increased flexibility for organising students and the quality and quantity of feedback the students receive (see Feedback).
5. As an alternative to reducing class sizes, it may be possible to change the deployment of staff (both teachers and teacher aides) so that teachers can work more intensively with smaller groups (see Small group tuition).
The average impact for reducing class size is around 2 months additional progress over the course of an academic year. The evidence in this area of very limited, so should be treated with caution.
The key issue appears to be whether the reduction is large enough to permit the teacher to change their teaching approach when working with a smaller class and whether, as a result, the students change their learning behaviours. If no change occurs then, perhaps unsurprisingly, learning is unlikely to improve. When a change in teaching approach does accompany a class size reduction (which appears hard to achieve until classes are smaller than about 20) then benefits on achievement can be identified, in addition to improvements on behaviour and attitudes.
Effects are similar for both primary and secondary schools.
Impact on reading is higher (+2 months) than mathematics (+1 month).
Most studies examine reductions of 8-10 students. The impact of studies that examine reducing class sizes by 5 students is smaller, on average.
The evidence suggests that significant effects of reducing class size are not seen until the number of students has decreased substantially (to fewer than 20 or even 15 students). Crucially, a reduction in class size is only likely to be effective if it permits teachers to change their teaching approach to the extent that this changes the learning behaviours of students. High quality implementation of reducing class size might consider:
The costs associated with reducing class sizes are very high, as additional staff would be required to reduce class sizes.
This estimate does not consider the potential cost of sourcing facilities to host the additional lessons created through reducing class size. Space to host lessons is therefore a pre-requisite to reducing class size, without which the costs are likely to be much higher.
The security of the evidence around reducing class size is rated as very limited. 41 studies were identified. Overall, the topic lost three additional padlocks because:
As with any evidence review, the Toolkit summarises the average impact of approaches when researched in academic studies. It is important to consider your context and apply your professional judgement when implementing an approach in your setting.