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  1. Feb 27, 2018 · And in six states, the highest-poverty districts received at least 15 percent more funding per student than the lowest-poverty districts, including Georgia, Minnesota, New Jersey, Ohio, South...

    • Key Findings
    • Conclusion
    • Appendix: Data and Methodology
    • II. Calculating Five-Year Phase-In Gaps
    • III. Dataset and Interpretation

    Our cost model and interactive map identify every district in the country with a funding gap—that is, where current spending is below the amount that our model estimates is necessary to achieve average outcomes, based on that district’s unique geography and student demographics. The result is that broad swaths of the country, including much of the ...

    Inequity in public education is not a natural occurrence, but rather the result of funding choices. Decades of disinvestment in public education at the state and federal level have a cost, and it has primarily come at the expense of Latinx, Black, and low-income students. As protests across the country call into question how our policies affect com...

    I. Calculating One-Year Gaps

    i. District Funding Gap (Per Pupil) For every school district in the country, our national cost model estimates what it would cost on a per-pupil basis for a district to achieve national average outcomes (based on 2016 reading and math assessments, grades three through eight) by 2020. The model takes into account varied geographic contexts and schools serving varied student populations—for example, that, all else equal, high-poverty districts must spend more to achieve the same outcomes. Thes...

    In part two, we built off of our one-year cost model to estimate what it would cost to “close the gaps” by phasing in funding from over five years, from 2021 to 2025. This model offers more realistic estimates for policymakers, in particular, as it provides them a roadmap for scaling up investments over time and gradually, rather than magically clo...

    We are making the full dataset from our national cost model available here.This includes all calculations for every school district in the country, more than 1,300 in total. Note that cells with a value of (999) represent “negative” gaps—meaning that the district is currently spending above what our model estimates is needed to achieve average outc...

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  3. Dec 28, 2022 · They are: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Florida, North Carolina, and Wyoming. More than a dozen others saw level funding or drops of up to 10 percent during that period. 18 The percentage...

    • mlieberman@educationweek.org
    • Reporter
  4. Based on these metrics, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Jersey have the best public schools in the United States. 1. Massachusetts has the best public school system in the U.S. 48.8% of Massachusetts's eligible schools ranked in the top 25% of high school rankings, a total of 167 schools.

    State
    Overall Ranking
    School Quality
    Student Safety
    1
    5
    2
    2
    3
    7
    3
    1
    16
    4
    4
    5
  5. While some schools might have rigorous academics, fancy amenities, devoted college counselors, and enticing extracurriculars, many more US public schools are underfunded and understaffed.

  6. Jul 11, 2023 · 7.11.2023. Historically, many American students from poor families have been trapped in sorely underfunded public schools. The conventional wisdom suggests that school funding remains unequal across low- and high-income schools and that equal funding equates to equitable resources for students.

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