The built environment matters. A small but growing body of knowledge demonstrates that cognitive, social-emotional, and physical development is related to the built environment. Research has shown links between school conditions, learning experiences, and stakeholder outcomes, but until now there’s been insufficient data to inform large-scale modernization programs. A multi-disciplinary team of researchers from Perkins Eastman and the Drexel University School of Education aimed to fill these gaps.
The Billion-Dollar Challenge:
- 49.4 million students were enrolled in public schools in fall, 2021 (source)
- Average age of the nation’s public schools in 2023: 42 years (source)
- Nationwide shortfall in maintenance, operations, and capital expenditures in 2021: $85 billion annually (source)
- That annual deficit had risen by $25 billion since 2016 (source)
- Districts with medium-to-high rates of poverty have a greater proportion of this under-investment (source)
This Study’s Goal:
With an interest in asserting, or re-asserting, the pivotal role that schools play in American communities, we sought to:
• Understand the impact of school modernization on occupants’ well-being, satisfaction, and performance
• Identify spaces and design features that impact students and teachers and how they interact with the educational environment
• Explore the connection between the quality of a school’s facilities and design features and how well it connects to its surrounding community
• Develop new knowledge to serve district leaders and designers who are planning new and renovated schools
• Empower districts to advocate for greater funding while enabling them to more effectively spend the limited funds they do have