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Danielle Farrie; Nicole Ciullo – Education Law Center, 2024
In an effort to reduce state spending on special education in public schools, New Jersey moved to census-based funding as part of the new school funding formula, the School Funding Reform Act (SFRA), adopted in 2008. The census approach funds all districts using the statewide average classification rate and a statewide average "excess…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Funding Formulas, Census Figures, Special Education
Center for Public Education, National School Boards Association, 2024
Understanding how urban school districts allocate their education funds can help school leaders create more effective budgeting strategies and provide a basis for advocating for additional funding when necessary. This report provides an overview of how urban districts distribute their financial resources, highlights key areas of spending, and…
Descriptors: Public Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Finance, Urban Schools
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
Linea Koehler; Bonnie O’Keefe – Bellwether, 2023
State school finance systems can play an essential role in directing additional resources to schools serving economically disadvantaged students, and research suggests that these resources can make a measurable difference in student outcomes. The vast majority of states (45) allocate some funding to districts based on their enrollment of…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, State Aid, Resource Allocation, Economically Disadvantaged
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Stephen Q. Cornman; Osei Ampadu; Kaitlin Hanak; Stephen Wheeler – National Center for Education Statistics, 2024
This First Look report presents data on public elementary and secondary education revenues and expenditures at the local education agency (LEA) or school district level for fiscal year (FY) 2022. Specifically, this report includes the following types of school district finance data: (1) revenue, current expenditure, and capital outlay expenditure…
Descriptors: Income, Expenditures, Public Schools, Elementary Secondary Education
Dan Goldhaber; Grace Falken; Roddy Theobald – National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research (CALDER), 2024
The Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund (ESSER) was the largest onetime federal investment in K-12 schools in history, funneling almost $200 billion to states and school districts. We use novel data from Washington State to investigate the extent to which ESSER funding causally influenced spending on school personnel. We argue…
Descriptors: Emergency Programs, Federal Aid, Elementary Secondary Education, Grants
Danielle Farrie; Robert Kim – Education Law Center, 2024
Education Law Center's "Making the Grade" is an annual overview of the condition of school finance in the states. Using the most recently available data from the 2021-2022 school year, the report ranks and grades each state on three measures to answer the key question: How fair is school funding in your state? The three fairness measures…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Educational Equity (Finance), Expenditure per Student, Public Schools
Krista Kaput; Titilayo Tinubu Ali; Jennifer O’Neal Schiess – Bellwether, 2024
Understanding how the District of Columbia (DC) funds District of Columbia Public School (DCPS) students and DC public charter school students is essential to ensuring all students receive the support they need as COVID-19 pandemic-era federal funds expire. The recent rise in the Uniform Per Student Funding Formula (UPSFF) and the boost in the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Charter Schools, Public Schools, Educational Finance
Cathy Grace; Kathy Thornburg; Sheerah Neal Keith; Max Altman; Allison Boyle – Southern Education Foundation, 2024
Head Start programs in many of the states with higher rates of children living in poverty have received less per-child funding allocations than programs in states with lower rates of children living in poverty for years. Further, the educators who teach these children are vastly underpaid, and their pay is also inequitable among states and…
Descriptors: Low Income Students, Federal Programs, Social Services, Resource Allocation
Hannah Jarmowlowski; Chad Aldeman; Marguerite Roza – Grantee Submission, 2022
School districts have increasingly adopted weighted student funding (WSF) formulas that allocate dollars, rather than staff positions, to schools in the name of equity and flexibility. While research to date has studied equity in some of these districts, there is no research that examines the entire cohort of WSF districts together. This paper…
Descriptors: School Districts, Funding Formulas, Low Income Students, Educational Finance
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Hannah Jarmolowski; Chad Aldeman; Marguerite Roza – Peabody Journal of Education, 2022
School districts have increasingly adopted weighted student funding (WSF) formulas that allocate dollars, rather than staff positions, to schools in the name of equity and flexibility. While research to date has studied equity in some of these districts, there is no research that examines the entire cohort of WSF districts together. This paper…
Descriptors: School Districts, Funding Formulas, Low Income Students, Educational Finance
Education Law Center, 2023
New research finds that increased spending on public education improves student achievement, thereby debunking the notion that "money doesn't matter" and making the case for greater investment in preschool-12 public education. How money is spent matters, but funding must also be adequate, equitable, and stable from year to year so that…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, Public Education, Academic Achievement
Anglum, J. Cameron; Shores, Kenneth A.; Steinberg, Matthew P. – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2021
In 2009, the federal government passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) to combat the effects of the Great Recession and state revenue shortfalls, directing over $97 billion to school districts. In this chapter, we draw lessons from this distribution of fiscal stimulus funding to inform future federal intervention in school…
Descriptors: Federal Aid, Economic Climate, Federal Legislation, Educational Finance
Center for Public Education, National School Boards Association, 2021
Hold-harmless provisions in state aid formulas are meant to restrict declines in revenues for school districts. They may take several forms, including limits on the changes in state aid from year to year, supplemental funding for districts with declining enrollment, alternatives for calculating the state aid amount, or use of past enrollments in…
Descriptors: State Aid, Educational Finance, School Districts, Declining Enrollment
Connors-Tadros, Lori; Weisenfeld, G. G. – National Institute for Early Education Research, 2020
In order to expand high quality public preschool, a 3-step approach to ensuring adequate funding is needed. First, design a program to meet a state's goals and then determine the cost of that program. Second, designate how the resources to pay for that cost will be obtained. Third, specify how the funds will be distributed to local entities. The…
Descriptors: Resource Allocation, Educational Quality, Preschool Education, Program Design
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