"MODULAR CLASSROOMS"
The President's Message, May 1999
by Linc Moss, Ramtech Building Systems, Inc.
The Issue. For the last several years, many print articles and several
television spots have surfaced complaining about the use of modular classrooms
as supplemental facilities on our nation's public school campuses. Typically
these articles peak around election time or "sweeps week." Often the gist of
the piece centers on the public "eyesore" these buildings create, the
inconvenience of walking to and from the modular classrooms in bad weather, and
even the safety of those students occupying these buildings. Recently, the
Philadelphia Inquirer Sunday Magazine published a story concerning the use of
portable classrooms in several of the more upscale neighborhoods around
suburban Philadelphia. This is probably one of the more even-handed articles
written on this subject, however, it still poses very little that is flattering
to our industry.
In many school districts, the modular classroom has become the central focus for
additional educational funding. The rallying cry, "no more trailers" even made
it into President Clinton's State of the Union Address. This was in conjunction
with Clinton's Education Accountability Act calling for tougher guidelines
associated with continued federal assistance. The problem that school
administrators face is that, as our population grays, it is more difficult for
bond issues to pass. In many areas the primary tax base is losing ties to
education. With the children grown and fixed incomes looming on the horizon,
many Americans are balking at higher property taxes to support additional
schools. As a result, more and more school districts have to look at interim
solutions. The flip side of this situation is suburban neighborhoods receiving
the influx of urban-flight and the continued growth in the Sunbelt states.
While these people are younger with school age children, the residential growth
in these areas is far outpacing the needed tax support from industry. The only
solution is to raise property taxes.
Why Us? What has caused our industry to become associated with this
negativity? MBI member companies provide code compliant clean comfortable
buildings to answer our school overcrowding. We should be the good guys in this
story, not the purveyors of junk we're often depicted as. Maybe an
introspective look should be the first order of business to determine how much
we've contributed to this mindset. The Inquirer article highlights a "50-foot
trailer". This single-wide does not provide the most conducive learning
environment. Typically classrooms are configured more like a square than a
rectangle. The use of doublewides or complexes allows more conventional space
planning in this occupancy than does a single-wide. The teacher using the
building explains how, due to the configuration, she had to place student desks
in "pods" rather than rows. She also commented on how the code-required
handicapped toilet occupies an inordinate amount of interior room and now
doubles as a storage closet. Placement of a single-wide structure for use as a
classroom just invites public criticism. The way buildings are specified and
designed can contribute or help diffuse issues similar to this. When we use the
cheapest materials in the construction of the building, set the building
without skirting, and construct "rickety" exterior stairs and ramps, we create
an atmosphere of inferiority when compared to the existing structures that we
are supplementing. Even though the building is temporary, execution of the work
and the materials used should reflect the very best when children are the prime
occupants.
More Classrooms. There are many factors that contribute to the wide
spread use of modular classrooms. Gaining momentum throughout the nation
currently are several classroom size reduction initiatives. Studies show that
smaller classes help teachers provide more personal attention to students and
spend less time on discipline; as a result, students learn more and get a
stronger foundation in the basic skills. Several states have even mandated
student-to-teacher ratios. Other states reported to be involved in or
considering some sort of class size reduction initiative include Arizona,
Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New York, North
Carolina, Oklahoma and Utah.
California's story is somewhat typical of states with a classroom size
reduction initiative. In the 1996-97 school year, California began its Class
Size Reduction Program, through which it gives money to school districts for
the purpose of reducing the student/teacher ratio to 20 to 1 in kindergarten
through third grade. In the 1997/98 school year, 1.9 million students were
assigned to smaller classes in California schools. California school districts
hired 18,000 new teachers in 1996. Districts also have had to use various means
to create sufficient classroom space. At that time, California legislation
mandated that at least 30% of all new classrooms were to be relocatable. Given
a conservative estimate that 50% of the additional 18,000 teachers were somehow
housed in existing facilities, our industry would have provided at least 3,000
classrooms for the additional teachers. Classroom size reduction clearly
increases the demand for more classrooms, providing more opportunities for
conventional construction as well as modular.
Finally, there are more kids going to school everyday. In 1987 nationally, we
had 40,008,000 students in public schools. 27,933,000 were in primary school
while 12,076,000 were enrolled in secondary schools. In 1997 the nation's
public school enrollment was 46,353,000, with 33,216,000 in primary and
13,138,000 in secondary schools. This reflects an increase of 15.86 percent.
Projection through the year 2007 has public schools with a total enrollment of
54,324,000 or an increase of 17.20 percent over today's enrollment. Private
schools in 1987 had a total enrollment of 5,479,000. In 1997 enrollment in the
nations private schools totaled 5,863,000. This reflected an increase of 7
percent. Enrollment projections for private schools are not available. While
the above numbers represent the nation as a whole, Florida's growth is more
typical of a high growth state. In the fall of 1997, total prekindergarten
through twelfth grade enrollment in Florida was 2,290,726. When compared to the
fall of 1993, enrollment was at 2,040,835 reflecting an increase of 249,891
students or 12.24 percent. If annualized and compared to the same time period
as the national enrollment projections through the year 2007, Florida's
enrollment would increase by a staggering 48.96 percent!
What Can We Do? Educate the educators as much as possible. Provide
information that allows school officials to make informed choices. By utilizing
whatever tools are available, it is critical that the user of our products know
the options that we can offer. By making informed choices, and yes, maybe even
spending a little more money up front, the user can realize much more value
from their investment in modular construction. My experience is that users are
not opposed to making choices that render higher initial cost if they are
convinced the additional investment delivers a better building.
Two years ago Steven Winter embarked on creating software that would educate
school facilities administrators to the various options that modular
construction can offer. Schoolspec® is designed to be an interactive planning
aid that helps determine the required space, provides various design and
specification options and finally provides budgetary pricing for a specific
need. The options center around space planning, aesthetics, energy efficiency,
and life cycle costs. While many of the options seem somewhat unusual for the
modular classroom market that we have become accustomed to, they offered a
variety of choices that would allow the modular building to fit virtually any
existing architectural environment. Winter reported that the software would be
presented to the Department of Energy in April and will be available for MBI
members later this summer. Once in publication it should allow classroom buyers
an opportunity to see that modular construction can be more than just the bare
minimums we're often associated with.
Deliver what and when promised. Many of us face short windows of
opportunity in the educational market. Typically student enrollment projections
are not defined until late in the school year. This usually means requirements
are identified and must be executed during the short summer months. Our company
typically addresses 50-60 contracts for classroom buildings every summer. This
segment of our business demands more planning and constant attention than any
larger single project we contract for. Typically the Project Manager's area
takes on a "war room" atmosphere with the constant juggling of schedules and
contractors due to changes in weather, permit delays, and hidden site
conditions that cause delays. Without this planning and attention, we would not
be able to participate in the market. Delays in the delivery and installation
of classrooms cause hardships on educators that compound this already delicate
issue. For all the various reasons, parent groups are not thrilled with the
idea of modular classrooms to begin with, any delay in occupying the buildings
only convince them more that modulars are not the right choice.
Along with timely deliveries, we must provide products that we would be
thrilled for our own children to learn in. We all compete in arguably one of
the most competitive segments of the industry when we build classrooms. With
that said, it is still incumbent upon each of us to offer as much value as
possible in the products and services we provide. When facing a challenge, take
the highroad, go that little extra to achieve customer satisfaction. The idea
is to determine exactly what the customer's expectation is, then exceed that by
10%. If everyone would be able to accomplish these, articles like that in the
Inquirer would not be written.
Copyright ©
Modular Building Institute, May 1999.
|