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Martin F. Lueken – EdChoice, 2024
This report summarizes the fiscal effects of education choice programs across the United States from an analysis of 48 private education choice programs in 25 states plus D.C. The programs in the analysis include five education savings account programs, 22 school voucher programs, and 21 tax credit scholarship programs. This study estimates the…
Descriptors: School Choice, Private Schools, Costs, Expenditure per Student
Kelly, Matthew Gardner; Farrie, Danielle – Educational Researcher, 2023
This brief describes how several commonly used per-pupil funding measures derived from federal data include passthrough funding in the numerator but exclude students attached to this funding from the denominator, artificially inflating per-pupil ratios. Three forms of passthrough funding for students not educated by the school district where they…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Expenditure per Student, Data Use, Error of Measurement
Daniel DiSalvo; Reade Ben – Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, 2024
In many parts of the country, enrollment in traditional public schools has fallen to its lowest point in decades. However, states, cities, and school districts have been slow to respond to the reality of empty desks. This report examines trends in school enrollment, focusing on several of America's most populous cities, as well as the budgetary…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Declining Enrollment, Educational Policy, Trend Analysis
Lapp, David; Eddins, Mary – Research for Action, 2022
Pennsylvania has "the highest cyber charter school enrollment in the country" with student enrollment soaring in 2020-21 due to concerns related to the COVID-19 pandemic. School districts paid over $1 billion in tuition for students enrolled in Pennsylvania's 14 cyber charter schools in 2020-21, a $335 million increase over the prior…
Descriptors: Virtual Schools, Charter Schools, School Expansion, COVID-19
Allison N. Kopco – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This dissertation examines the school-level impacts on student achievement in the state of Pennsylvania from the economic inputs provided to students and schools. I conduct a comprehensive review of prior literature on Pennsylvania education funding, the issue of equity versus adequacy, academic spending per pupil, and teacher compensation, as…
Descriptors: Expenditure per Student, Teacher Salaries, Academic Achievement, Influences
Alex Spurrier; Bonnie O’Keefe; Biko McMillan – Bellwether, 2024
At their best, K-12 public school systems can be engines of social and economic mobility. Unfortunately, schools in lower-income districts -- whose students have the greatest academic needs -- often receive less funding than their counterparts in more affluent districts. Discussions about closing these funding gaps usually zoom all the way out to…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Equity (Finance), Educational Finance, Metropolitan Areas
Emily Rauscher; Greer Mellon; Susanna Loeb – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
The academic and economic benefits of school spending are well-established, but focusing on these outcomes may underestimate the full social benefits of school spending. Recent increases in U.S. child mortality are driven by injuries and raise questions about what types of social investments could reduce child deaths. We use close school district…
Descriptors: School Taxes, Expenditure per Student, Mortality Rate, Youth
DeAngelis, Corey A. – Journal of School Choice, 2021
Access to public charter schools could theoretically reduce school safety problems by increasing competitive pressures, improving matches between schools and students, enhancing discipline policies, and allowing students to relocate to peer groups and cultures that discourage risky behaviors. Using publicly available data from the Pennsylvania…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Public Schools, School Safety, School Choice
Lueken, Martin F. – EdChoice, 2021
School choice critics argue that choice programs drain resources from public schools and therefore harm students who remain in them. Because policymakers are tasked with balancing their states' budgets and ensuring that their public schools meet educational provisions in their states' constitutions, they are concerned with the fiscal effects of…
Descriptors: School Choice, Educational Finance, Costs, Private Schools
Emily Rauscher; Greer Mellon; Susanna Loeb; Carolyn Abott – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Targeted school funding is a potentially valuable policy lever to increase educational equality by race, ethnicity, and income, but it remains unclear how to target funds most effectively. We use a regression discontinuity approach to compare districts that narrowly passed or failed a school funding election. We use close tax elections in 9 states…
Descriptors: School District Spending, Financial Support, School Funds, Outcomes of Education
Eddins, Mary; Lapp, David – Research for Action, 2020
In recent years, some school districts across Allegheny County have made noteworthy changes to school policing. While some districts have sought to reduce or eliminate reliance on police, a growing number of other districts in the county have, with community support announced expanded police presence and in some cases have decided to arm police.…
Descriptors: Police, Police School Relationship, School Security, County School Districts
Jilleah G. Welch; Matthew N. Murray – Appalachian Regional Commission, 2020
This is the first of two reports exploring the relationship between coal activity and funding for elementary and secondary education in the Appalachian Region. In this first report, patterns in funding for elementary and secondary education are explored using annual data from 1995 to 2016. Counties that had some level of coal employment over this…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Financial Support, Fuels, Mining
Kelly, Matthew Gardner – Education and Urban Society, 2022
In the United States, researchers have documented persistent racial disparities in school funding for decades. Drawing on evidence from a recent policy change in Pennsylvania, this article contributes to research on the role of state governments in limiting or expanding racial disparities in K-12 education funding by examining differences in the…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Policy, School Districts, Racial Composition
Baker, Bruce D.; Cotto, Robert, Jr. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2020
An analysis of school district spending across the U.S. reveals 66 districts where the students face much greater needs than in surrounding districts (i.e., child poverty is more than 20% higher) but where per-pupil spending is less than 90% of the region's average. This not only means that they have less money to spend on children who require…
Descriptors: School Districts, Educational Finance, Financial Support, Hispanic American Students
Carolyn Abott; Vladimir Kogan; Stéphane Lavertu; Zachary Peskowitz – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2020
We use close tax elections to estimate the impact of school district funding increases on operational spending and student outcomes across seven states. Districts with passing levies directed new revenue toward support services and instructor salaries but did not increase teacher staffing levels. These districts eventually realized gains in…
Descriptors: School Districts, Operating Expenses, School District Spending, Outcomes of Education