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Eunice Sookyung Han; Emma Garcia – American Journal of Education, 2024
Purpose: The unanticipated changes in state legislation in Idaho, Indiana, Michigan, Tennessee, and Wisconsin in 2011-12 significantly restricted or entirely prohibited the collective bargaining rights of teachers. Considering these institutional changes as a natural experiment, we examine the causal impact of weakening teacher unionization on…
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, Teacher Rights, State Legislation, Workers Compensation
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Katie Sloan – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2024
At a time when national discourse in the USA centers the need for professionalization, regulation, and surveillance, this article emphasizes the ways in which neoliberal logics harm those working in early childhood education in the USA. While stakeholders at every level debate proposed solutions to the early childhood education crisis, largely…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Early Childhood Education, Child Care, Teacher Salaries
Cassidy Syftestad Klutts – Mackinac Center for Public Policy, 2023
Between March 2020 and March 2021, the federal government distributed an unprecedented amount of money to American public schools to address the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. About $6 billion was distributed in three waves to the state of Michigan alone. This report uses data provided by districts to the state government to analyze how…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Federal Aid, COVID-19, Pandemics
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
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Conlin, Michael; Jalilevand, Meg – Journal of Education Finance, 2015
Since the implementation of IDEA in 1975, as spending on education has continued to grow, a large portion of that spending has been dedicated to students with special needs. This study uses a panel dataset of local and intermediate school districts to examine the complex special education funding and delivery scheme in the State of Michigan. Using…
Descriptors: Special Needs Students, Disabilities, Federal Legislation, Educational Legislation
Hanna, Robert; Morris, Bo – Center for American Progress, 2014
This paper explores what happens to similar groups of children educated in different school districts. In this case, the "twins" in the study are groups of students who live in the same state in similar geographies and who share certain demographic characteristics. For this report, "twin districts" have very similar sizes and…
Descriptors: Productivity, Academic Achievement, Cohort Analysis, Educational Assessment
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Arsen, David; Ni, Yongmei – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2012
There is widespread concern that administration consumes too much of the educational dollar in traditional public schools, diverting needed resources from classroom instruction and hampering efforts to improve student outcomes. By contrast, charter schools are predicted to have leaner administration and allocate resources more intensively to…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Resource Allocation, Traditional Schools, Educational Administration
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Major, Marci L. – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2013
This study was designed to examine the decision-making process for keeping or cutting the music program in one selected public school district. Lekbery School District, in the Detroit suburb of Lekbery, Michigan, had not made extreme cuts to the music program in over 10 years, nor had it specifically targeted the music program when budgets cuts…
Descriptors: Music, Music Education, Elementary Secondary Education, School District Spending
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Chaudhary, Latika – Economics of Education Review, 2009
This paper estimates the impact of the Michigan school finance reform, "Proposal A," on education inputs and test scores. Using a difference-in-difference estimation strategy, I find that school districts in Michigan used the increase in educational spending generated through "Proposal A" to increase teacher salaries and reduce…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Class Size, Finance Reform, Grade 7
Myung, Jeannie; Martinez, Krissia; Nordstrum, Lee – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2013
Building a stronger teacher workforce requires the thoughtful orchestration of multiple processes working together in a human capital system. This white paper presents a framework that can be used to take stock of current efforts to enhance the teacher workforce in school districts or educational organizations, as well as their underlying theories…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Instructional Improvement, Faculty Development, Improvement Programs
Zehr, Mary Ann – Education Week, 2007
A long-projected revenue chill is beginning to bite in a number of states, putting pressure on education policymakers to defend existing programs--and, in some cases, forcing them to prepare for the worst if budget cuts become a reality. The causes vary, from slack property-tax receipts in Florida to a chronically sluggish economy in Michigan. But…
Descriptors: School Districts, Educational Finance, Budgets, Budgeting
Van Beek, Michael – Mackinac Center for Public Policy, 2011
In the passionate debates over providing equal educational opportunity for all children, it's frequently argued that large financial inequities create challenges for many public schools, particularly those in lower-income urban areas. This study compares the revenues and operating expenditures of Michigan's urban, suburban, town and rural school…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Public Schools, Expenditures, Municipalities
Briggs, Linda L. – Campus Technology, 2007
This article describes the benefits one gets when big schools roll out highly effective eProcurement systems--strategic improvements and savings. eProcurement systems are hot again in higher education, driven by unrelenting cost containment demands, along with industry shifts that have consolidated choices and brought top products to the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Costs, Administrators, Purchasing
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Fisher, Ronald C.; Wassmer, Robert W. – National Tax Journal, 1995
Describes the radical change in the way the states of Michigan and California finance their educational systems. Looks at advantages and disadvantages of those changes. (JOW)
Descriptors: Centralization, Educational Change, Educational Finance, Educational Responsibility
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Gyimah-Brempong, Kwabena; Gyapong, Anthony O. – Economics of Education Review, 1992
This paper uses data from the state of Michigan and a translog cost function to estimate and compare three measures of elasticities of factor substitution--Allen, Morishima, and Shadow--in the production of education. (Author)
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Educational Economics, Elementary Secondary Education, Outcomes of Education
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