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Dave Wells – Program on Education Policy and Governance, 2025
Arizona has represented the epicenter of school choice in the United States. The state has had open enrollment for district schools for 30 years, charter schools for more than 25 years, a private school tax credit program for nearly as long, and was the first state in the country in 2011 to enact direct parent-appropriations through targeted…
Descriptors: Private Education, Educational Finance, School Choice, State Aid
Anna Granias; Anne Li; Naw-Amelia Kacher – Wilder Research, 2025
In an era where information is both abundant and increasingly complex, school library media centers (LMCs) serve as hubs for learning, creativity, and critical thought. Yet, little to no data exist describing the state of school LMCs in Minnesota. During the 2023 Minnesota legislative session, Minnesota's Multicounty Multitype Library Systems…
Descriptors: School Libraries, Educational Legislation, State Aid, Census Figures
Bhavani Arabandi; Leslee Haisma – Urban Institute, 2025
In the context of a tight labor market with more jobs than workers to fill openings, and as young people increasingly seek alternatives to college, apprenticeships have become more important than ever. While the "earn and learn" model of apprenticeship seems to be the obvious choice to address labor market needs, it remains underutilized…
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Costs, State Programs, Financial Support
Education Resource Strategies, 2024
To help address funding and teaching resource disparities across districts in the state, Texas leaders developed the Teacher Incentive Allotment (TIA). The Allotment aims to make the teaching job more appealing and sustainable, particularly in rural areas and in areas with a high concentration of economically disadvantaged students. This document…
Descriptors: Incentives, Teacher Persistence, State Aid, Teacher Salaries
Joseph W. Wheeless – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The North Carolina Promise (NC Promise) is an education subsidy program that sets in-state tuition at $500 per semester and out-of-state tuition at $2500 per semester for all undergraduates at four campuses of the University of North Carolina (UNC) System campuses applies to all undergraduate students beginning with the Fall 2018 semester. A goal…
Descriptors: Tuition, Undergraduate Students, State Colleges, Student Loan Programs
State Approaches to Short-Term Postsecondary Credentials: Challenges, Opportunities, and Policy Gaps
Christina Sedney; Patrick Lane – Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education, 2025
The report "State Approaches to Short-Term Postsecondary Credentials: Challenges, Opportunities, and Policy Gaps" explores how state policymakers engage with short-term postsecondary credentials, highlighting key policy levers such as state authorization, consumer protections, financial aid, and quality standards. It examines the…
Descriptors: State Policy, Microcredentials, Postsecondary Education, Consumer Education
Public Agenda, 2025
Public Agenda surveyed Illinois residents to learn about how they view public higher education and what would help it serve them and the state better. Three research briefs highlight key findings from the broader survey findings. This brief finds that nearly three in four residents--including majorities of Democrats, independents and…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Public Education, Higher Education, Educational Policy
Ohio Department of Education and Workforce, 2024
Ohio's public schools provide special education services to children with disabilities as early as preschool. Every year, as required by Ohio Revised Code 3323.20, the Ohio Department of Education and Workforce reports the number of preschool children who received state-funded special education services during the previous year, disaggregated…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Students with Disabilities, Public Schools, Special Education
Taylor, Barrett J.; Kunkle, Kelsey; Watts, Kimberly – Higher Education Policy, 2023
The balance wheel hypothesis--a classic tenet of USA state-level policy analysis that suggests state funding for higher education varies in response to macroeconomic cycles--has held up to scrutiny over time. However, new social conditions within the Republican Party, namely growing hostility toward independent institutions, call for a more…
Descriptors: Higher Education, State Aid, Political Attitudes, State Policy
Phoebe Harris; Analisa Pines; Zipi Diamond – Child Trends, 2023
Despite the relative increase in early care and education (ECE) investment over recent decades, access to infant and toddler care continues to be a hurdle for countless families across the nation. While access is a multifaceted issue, main contributors include a lack of available slots and the high cost of providing care to infants and toddlers.…
Descriptors: Child Care, Infant Care, Toddlers, State Programs
Foundation for Excellence in Education (ExcelinEd), 2023
As of 2023, 44 states plus the District of Columbia provide schools with supplemental funding for their low-income students. Policymakers often want to understand how the "amount" of extra funding they provide for low-income students compares to other states. Because states use different methodologies to determine these amounts, previous…
Descriptors: Low Income Students, Educational Finance, Expenditure per Student, State Aid
Kilander, Alex – National Institute for Early Education Research, 2022
Outdoor preschool education is increasing, particularly in the United States where it has been less common than in some other countries. Proponents claim a variety of benefits from the approach, including that it allows children to explore and play in nature much more than in traditional classrooms. In the context of a pandemic with high rates of…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Preschool Education, State Aid, Educational Finance
Chris Duncombe; Lauren Peisach – Education Commission of the States, 2025
The distribution of state funding to school districts has a tremendous impact on student learning opportunities. State leaders juggle different priorities, tradeoffs and incentives when designing funding formulas with the goal of ensuring every student has the learning opportunities to succeed. This toolkit offers a strategic guide for reforming…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Finance, Financial Support, State Aid
Jessica Steiger; John Fink; Alex Perry – Community College Research Center, Teachers College, Columbia University, 2024
The benefits of participating in one of these programs have been well documented, but so too have the gaps in been well documented, but so too have the gaps in participation among Black and Hispanic students, English participation among Black and Hispanic students, English learners, students with disabilities, and other groups not well learners,…
Descriptors: Dual Enrollment, State Aid, Administrators, High School Students
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