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Webber, Douglas – Education Next, 2018
How did State U. get so expensive? A leading culprit is reduced state support. Since 1987, the typical student at a public college or university has seen the government subsidy for her education drop by $2,337, or roughly one quarter. And in prior research, the author found that every $1,000 in state divestment leads colleges to raise tuition by…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Public Colleges, State Aid, Funding Formulas
Pratt, Timothy – Education Next, 2017
Community colleges, with their commitment to open access, admit millions of students each year who are unprepared for college-level work, even though they have earned a high-school diploma. For decades the schools had a built-in base of students attracted to their open doors and relative affordability. But enrollment at public two-year college has…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Access to Education, Disadvantaged, Funding Formulas
Gross, Betheny; Jochim, Ashley – Education Next, 2016
Five years ago, Baltimore City Public Schools seemed on the brink of a breakthrough. The district had been freed from mayoral control after more than a century, and a high-energy superintendent was leading bold moves to de-emphasize central administration, give schools greater autonomy, and engage families in a revitalized portfolio of educational…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Urban Schools, Public Schools, Educational Administration
Roza, Marguerite; Fullerton, Jon – Education Next, 2013
Many state education leaders are taking a fresh look at school finance in hopes of containing costs. Some are reworking transportation formulas, or zeroing in on special education eligibility, or merging districts. Others are investing more in digital learning, charter innovations, and information systems. But state leaders too often overlook a…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Funding Formulas, State Policy, Enrollment
Horn, Michael B. – Education Next, 2013
State policy is crucial to the spread of digital-learning opportunities at the elementary and secondary level. A review of recent legislative action reveals policies that are constantly in flux and differ quite markedly from one state to another. Some have hoped for model digital-learning legislation that could handle all the various issues…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Finance, Funding Formulas
Hess, Frederick M. – Education Next, 2010
In "Education Unbound: The Promise and Practice of Greenfield Schooling," this author argued for new education service-delivery organizations that, free from the constricting norms and rules of traditional providers, focused single-mindedly on executing their model. The challenge for reformers is to recognize that enabling such providers is not…
Descriptors: School Choice, Educational Finance, Models, Funding Formulas
Costrell, Robert M. – Education Next, 2009
Do school vouchers save the taxpayer money, or do they add to taxpayer burdens? Which groups of taxpayers are most affected, and do they gain or lose? What is the financial impact on public school districts? Usually, these questions are debated in the abstract. Now it is possible to get more concrete answers from the nation's longest-running…
Descriptors: Funding Formulas, Public Schools, Private Schools, Legislators
Berry, Christopher; Wysong, Charles – Education Next, 2010
While school-finance lawsuits have attracted significant attention in the legal community and generated numerous state-specific case studies, nationwide analyses of the effects of school-finance judgments (SFJs) have been relatively few. This small pool of studies has produced some common conclusions, namely, that such judgments reduce funding…
Descriptors: Finance Reform, Educational Finance, School Districts, Court Litigation
Hanushek, Eric – Education Next, 2005
The education problems in New York City (and a number of other jurisdictions that face court financing challenges) are real and important. Many people would indeed be willing to put more money into New York City schools (or any poorly performing school for that matter) if they had any reason to believe that students' achievement would improve…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Accountability, Academic Achievement, Educational Change