February 09, 2012


Font Size


         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines  

Raising the Bar

Jun 1, 2005 12:00 PM, Joe Agron

Rhetoric on education equity continues to intensify, with states and plaintiffs arguing the issue in courts across the country. And with the focus to achieve equity revolving around equalizing funding between “poor” and “wealthy” systems, often the decision is to alter the way funding is allocated instead of ensuring appropriate monies are available to bring institutions “up” to adequate levels.

If you throw a dart at a map of the United States, chances are it will land on a state that has had or is currently embroiled in a lawsuit to win increases in education funding. In fact, only five states have had no litigation challenging the constitutionality of school funding.

Yet among those states where education funding is in the courts, the issue of equity and adequacy among schools continues to be elusive — even after court-ordered changes.

For example, a proposal by Texas lawmakers to increase education spending by about $3 billion over two years in response to last year's court decision that the school finance system is unconstitutional failed to advance last month. The doomed proposal also did not completely eliminate the infamous “Robin Hood” measure that redistributes local property-tax revenues from wealthy to poor districts.

And after two years of trying to correct what it viewed as “historic inequities in school budgets,” the New York City Education Department recently abandoned its effort to equalize budgets by giving additional money to certain schools by taking it from others. The reason: it found that schools originally determined to be getting too much money actually had little room for cuts — prompting the department to concede that without substantially more dollars, it could not continue its effort. The state, which has appealed a court order mandating billions of dollars in additional aid for NYC schools, is being blamed for the decision.

As the education funding battle continues to brew in the courts, the troubling trend of attempting to redistribute spending to an equal level needs to be refocused on “bringing up” spending to an adequate and appropriate level — ensuring higher-spending districts can continue to provide their current level of quality and distressed districts have the resources to match their wealthier counterparts.

SCORECARD

23

Number of states where lawsuits attempting to win increases in education funding are “in process.”

Source: Campaign for Fiscal Equity

5

Number of states that have had no litigation challenging the constitutionality of K-12 school funding.

Source: Campaign for Fiscal Equity

SOUTH CAROLINA

The only state that does not have an education clause in its constitution.

$3

Approximate amount, in billions, the Texas Legislature proposed increasing spending over two years on education in response to a court order. The proposal failed last month.

$14.07

Amount, in billions, of New York City's proposed total education budget, up from $13.77 billion this fiscal year.


Acceptable Use Policy
blog comments powered by Disqus
Featured Story

Outlook 2012

By Mike Kennedy

Education institutions must keep a tight rein on spending as they search for signs that the national economy is back on its feet.

Essential Reading

The Subtle Stuff

Vikas Nagardeolekar and Edwin Merritt

It's hard to win passage of a school construction bond — whether through a citizen referendum or the vote of a town council or general town meeting.

Hear and Now

Michael McKeon and Lincoln Berry

When acoustics are mentioned with regard to schools, many people first think of performing arts.

Making it Readable

Peter Gisolfi

When my daughter was 10 years old, she left the comfort of her elementary school for the unfamiliar territory of the middle/high school building — a crazy quilt of pieces from the 1910s, 1930s, 1960s and 1970s.

Echo Boom Impact

Phillipe Dordai and Joseph Rizzo

Like their baby-boomer parents, the echo-boom generation is reshaping the college and university landscape.


See the new and improved American School & University Buyer's Guide

Spotlight On

Spotlight On

Educational Interiors Showcase 2012: Entry Forms Due March 7

Click here for the official Call For Entries. New this year, choose two or more pages for your project and receive a FREE print-ready PDF of your layout.

2012 Calendar of Industry Events

From SchoolDesigns.com and American School & University. Download it now!

AS&U 100

American School & University highlights the largest 100 school districts each September. Who's growing and who's slowing?

AS&U's Online Buyers' Guide

Online Buyers' Guide

Find manufacturers and suppliers of products and services for education facilities, business and operations, including:

More Categories

Back to Top

Browse Back Issues

January 2012 issue of American School and University December 2011 issue of American School and University November 2011 issue of American School and University October 2011 issue of American School and University September 2011 issue of American School and University August 2011 issue of American School and University July 2011 issue of American School and University June 2011 issue of American School and University May 2011 issue of American School and University
BROWSE BACK ISSUES