Leveling the Landscape: An Analysis of K-12 Funding Inequities within Metro Areas

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Leveling the Landscape: An Analysis of K-12 Funding Inequities within Metro Areas
اللغة: English
المؤلفون: Alex Spurrier, Bonnie O’Keefe, Biko McMillan, Bellwether
المصدر: Bellwether. 2024.
الإتاحة: Bellwether. 650 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Suite 600, Washington, D.C. 20001. Tel: 877-636-0909; Web site: https://bellwether.org/
Peer Reviewed: N
Page Count: 33
تاريخ النشر: 2024
Sponsoring Agency: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Walton Family Foundation
نوع الوثيقة: Reports - Research
Education Level: Elementary Secondary Education
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education
Educational Equity (Finance)
Educational Finance
Metropolitan Areas
State Policy
Resource Allocation
Public Schools
Income
State Aid
Educational Policy
Expenditure per Student
Funding Formulas
مصطلحات جغرافية: Connecticut
Pennsylvania (Philadelphia)
Ohio (Columbus)
California (San Francisco)
California (Oakland)
Texas (Houston)
California
Illinois
New Jersey
New York
Pennsylvania
Texas
United States
مستخلص: 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 the state level or all the way down to the district level. But a big part of the problem lies in how funding is distributed across districts in the same metro area -- and in state policies that allow wealthy communities to raise and keep large amounts of local revenue exclusively for their own schools. "Leveling the Landscape: An Analysis of K-12 Funding Inequities Within Metro Areas" takes a closer look at the scale and sources of education funding within 123 large metro areas in 38 states, focusing on funding disparities among districts serving the same region. Key takeaways include: (1) a majority of public school students (62%) live in large metro areas with more than five districts -- a level of fragmentation that makes funding disparities more likely; (2) within fragmented metro areas, wealthy districts often generate much more local funding per student than less affluent districts; (3) state policies, despite their progressive tilt, rarely bridge this gap -- and often don't even come close; (4) in 49 of the 123 large metro areas we examined, school districts in affluent areas receive the most funding per pupil; (5) closing the state and local funding gap between districts within the metro areas we examined would cost $26 billion in additional state funding per year; and (6) more ambitious policies can greatly reduce or even eliminate funding disparities. The report also explores policy tools state leaders can use to ensure all districts within the same metro area at the very least receive similar funding per student and ideally, set the stage for even greater levels of per-pupil funding to flow to higher-needs districts.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2024
رقم الأكسشن: ED656111
قاعدة البيانات: ERIC