This just isn't true. A better gauge of these schools is the community income level. Looking at the list below, I would venture to guess most of these schools have a majority of their students on free and reduced lunches. Kids getting "lost in the numbers" are more likely to get left behind because of excessive absences, behavior issues, or the fact they tend to move schools often.
I teach at one of the state's largest high schools. We have systems in place for students who fall behind. We have alert systems which notify us when students fall below a certain grade in individual classes. We have resources to find students who are skipping or who can't make it in because they're watching their siblings while parents are at work. Smaller schools do not have these resources and those students are the ones who are more likely to get "left behind" as in, stuck in small town Iowa, undereducated, and limiting income potential.
There are only 19 Iowa schools scoring as "exceptional" and they're
ALL elementary or middle schools.
Most "urban" schools fall under "Commendable" or "Acceptable". Des Moines Public has all of their schools at or below Needs Improvement, but again, I would point to income level as opposed to class size.
High Schools in "Needs Improvement" are (
BOLDED "large schools"):
Cardinal High School
Thomas Jefferson High School (CR Jeff)
Columbus Community High School
Thomas Jefferson High School (CB Jeff)
Davenport Central High School
Davenport North High School
Davenport West High School
Des Moines Roosevelt High School
Eddyville-Blakesburg- Fremont Jr/Sr High
Fort Dodge High School
Fort Madison High School
Glidden-Ralston Jr-Sr High School
Keokuk High School
Manson Northwest Webster Junior High/High School
Mason City High School
Moravia High School
Murray High School
Muscatine High School
North Iowa High School
Orient-Macksburg Senior High School
Ruthven-Ayrshire High School
Sioux City West High School
South Tama County High School
Tri-County JR/SR High School
Waterloo East High School
Schools in "Piority" are (
BOLDED "large schools"):
Burlington Community High School
Clinton High School
Mid City High
Des Moines East
Des Moines North
Des Moines Lincoln
Des Moines Hoover
Moulton-Udell High School
If you look at the full list and not just high schools, rural schools are far more likely to be at the bottom of the list than urban schools. I will repeat myself again, this has more to do with income level than it does class size.