Sad commentary in this national report on school
funding by David Sciarra where texas gets lumped with Arizona and florida as follows:
Even more disturbing is that many states with unfair school funding make little effort to invest in public education. States such as Florida, Texas, and Arizona have economies that can support greater investment, but are unwilling to do so.
one obvious commonality across these states is a huge latino population that is hurting from not solely under-investment but an actual de-funding of public education together with a lack of school board leadership on the matter.
-Angela valenzuela
MAY 03 2018
School Funding: Deep Disparities Persist 50 Years After Kerner
Fifty years after the Kerner Commission warned
of a nation divided, school funding remains profoundly unfair and inequitable
in most states, shortchanging students across the country. Those most
disadvantaged by this enduring failure are millions of children from low-income
families and children of color, especially those in high-poverty, racially
isolated communities.
In the United States, public education is a
state obligation. The states, through their finance systems, account for
approximately 90% of all education funding in local districts and schools.
Every day in schools across America, the lack of
funding deprives students of the qualified teachers, support staff, academic
interventions, full-day kindergarten, early education, and other programs they
need to be successful in school. Unfair school funding remains entrenched in
most states, as it has for decades, impeding efforts to improve outcomes for
students, especially poor children, those learning English, and students with
disabilities.
The deplorable condition of state school finance
is laid bare in the 2017 edition of the National Report Card, Is School Funding Fair? This report goes beyond raw school
spending by analyzing both the funding level in each state and whether funding
is greater in higher-poverty school districts.
There persists a wide gulf in how much states
invest in public education, from $18,719 per pupil in New York to $6,277 in
Idaho. Most states also fail to allocate more funding to high-poverty districts
so they can deliver the resources necessary to give students from low-income
families the opportunity for academic success.
Seventeen states, including Virginia,
Connecticut, and Texas, have “regressive” school funding, which means they
provide less funding to their high-need districts than wealthier ones. Nevada
is the nation’s most unfair, with low spending and less money for a burgeoning
population of students from low-income families and those needing English
language instruction.
Twenty states, including New York, South
Carolina, and Michigan, have “flat” funding. These states fail to allocate
additional funds to address the academic, social, and health needs of students
in their poorest schools. Some of these states, such as North Carolina and
Oklahoma, send a very modest increase to poor schools, but rank at the bottom
of the nation in overall spending.
Only a few states, notably Massachusetts and New
Jersey, fairly fund their schools. These states provide sufficient funding and
significantly higher funding in the poorest districts. They also are the
nation’s highest performing overall, with students from low-income families
making strong gains.
Even more disturbing is that many states with
unfair school funding make little effort to invest in public education. States
such as Florida, Texas, and Arizona have economies that can support greater
investment, but are unwilling to do so.
California, by contrast, has made substantial
new investments in recent years to boost funding to its high-need schools,
and recent evidence suggests the new finance system is paying
off in higher achievement and graduation rates in those districts. Yet per
pupil spending in California is still among the lowest in the country.
For our students, this is not about dollars.
Funding levels determine whether effective teachers, Advanced Placement
classes, guidance counselors, extra learning time, and other essential
resources are available in the nation’s classrooms. In states with unfair
funding, children are less likely to have access to preschool, pupil-to-teacher
ratios are higher, and wages for teachers are not competitive with other
comparably skilled professions. The chronic and severe underfunding of public
education is behind the wave of teacher strikes and walkouts now sweeping
across the nation.
The sad fact is most states still fund schools
the old-fashioned way. Lawmakers decide how much they’re willing to spend,
usually based on last year’s budget, and then distribute funding to satisfy
powerful political constituencies. Only a handful have enacted finance reforms
driven by the actual cost of basic education resources, including the cost of
supports for struggling students and other interventions crucial in high-need
schools.
In many states, elected officials staunchly
resist school funding reform, even in the face of court orders, as is now the
case in Kansas. Governors in Colorado, Texas, and Connecticut have fought
funding lawsuits rather than use the courts to leverage action by recalcitrant
lawmakers.
Unfair school funding is a major reason why our
nation remains segregated, separate, and unequal a half century after the
Kerner Commission issued its call to action. It’s time to put this issue at the
top of the national education agenda.
David G. Sciarra is Executive Director of
Education Law Center and a co-author of the National Report Card.
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