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Shelby M. McNeill; Christopher A. Candelaria – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
This study investigates how individual states raise revenue to pay for elementary-secondary education spending after a school finance reform (SFR). We consider 24 states that implemented SFRs between 1989 and 2005. Using a synthetic control approach, we identify six case-study states (Arkansas, Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, New Hampshire, and…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, State Aid, Income, Elementary Secondary Education
Bruce D. Baker – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2025
This paper presents a comprehensive framework for evaluating and reforming education finance systems to ensure equity, adequacy, and equal opportunity in publicly funded education. We summarize decades conceptual work, explaining our evolving understanding of the role and purpose of school finance systems, leading to our current framing that the…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Finance Reform, Formative Evaluation, Educational Equity (Finance)
Andrew C. Johnston; Jonah Rockoff – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2022
As unfunded pension liabilities grow, governments experiment with ways to curb costs. We examine the effect of a representative cost-cutting reform on the retention and productivity of workers. The reform reduced pension annuities and increased penalties for early retirement, projected to save 8 percent of revenues. We leverage administrative…
Descriptors: Retirement Benefits, Labor Supply, Finance Reform, Budgeting
Min Sun; Christopher A. Candelaria; David Knight; Zachary LeClair; Sarah E. Kabourek; Katherine Chang – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2022
Knowing how policy-induced salary schedule changes affect teacher recruitment and retention will significantly advance our understanding of how resources matter for K-12 student learning. This study sheds light on this issue by estimating how legislative funding changes in Washington state in 2018-19--induced by the McCleary court-ordered…
Descriptors: Finance Reform, Teacher Recruitment, Teacher Persistence, Educational Finance
Zachary W. Oberfield; Bruce D. Baker – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2022
This paper contributes to our understanding of American education politics by exploring when and why states redistribute K-12 education dollars to poorer schools. It does so by examining three explanations for intra-state changes in progressivity: court-ordered finance reforms, political trends, and demographic changes. Using state-level data from…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Court Litigation, Educational Finance, State Aid
Candelaria, Christopher A.; McNeill, Shelby M.; Shores, Kenneth A. – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2022
School finance reforms are not well defined and are likely more prevalent than the current literature has documented. Using a Bayesian changepoint estimator, we quantitatively identify the years when state education revenues abruptly increased for each state between 1960 and 2008 and then document the state-specific events that gave rise to these…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Finance Reform, Bayesian Statistics, Income
Christopher A. Candelaria; Ishtiaque Fazlul; Cory Koedel; Kenneth A. Shores – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
We study the progressivity of state funding of school districts under Tennessee's weighted student funding formula. We propose a simple definition of progressivity based on the difference in exposure to district per-pupil funding between poor and non-poor students. The realized progressivity of district funding in Tennessee is much smaller--only…
Descriptors: Educational Equity (Finance), Equalization Aid, State Aid, Educational Finance
Eric Brunner; Joshua Hyman; Andrew Ju – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2018
School finance reforms caused some of the most dramatic increases in intergovernmental aid from states to local governments in U.S. history. We examine whether teachers' unions affected the fraction of reform-induced state aid that passed through to local spending and the allocation of these funds. Districts with strong teachers' unions increased…
Descriptors: Finance Reform, Unions, Resource Allocation, Educational Finance