Wojciech Kisiała
Articles
Geographia Polonica (2025) vol. 98, iss. 3, pp. 339-356 | Full text
doi: https://doi.org/10.7163/GPol.0306
Abstract
School size is an essential characteristic of the school network and one of the key conditions for the functioning and financing of schools. The main aim of this article is to assess the extent to which school size results from the influence of settlement and population factors (both historical and contemporary). We analysed data for all rural and urban-rural communes in Poland in 2022. A unique three-stage research procedure was applied, combining different categories of regression models (nationwide, regional, and geographically weighted regression [GWR]). The results indicate that settlement and population conditions are significant factors that shape the average school size. Their impact at the national scale is relatively small, but – according to the results of GWR modelling – it is strong in the vicinity of the largest cities and decreases with distance. In addition, four regional models seem to suggest the role of historical factors. These results, however, should be regarded as research artefacts reflecting the specificity of the spatial distribution of contemporary urbanisation processes.
Keywords: settlement system, rural schools, school size, regression analysis, Poland
bajerski@amu.edu.pl], Faculty of Human Geography and Planning Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań Krygowskiego 10, 61-680 Poznań: Poland
[wojciech.kisiala@ue.poznan.pl], Institute of Informatics and Quantitative Economics Poznań University of Economics and Business Al. Niepodległości 10, 61-875 Poznań: Poland