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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results
Conlin, Michael; Thompson, Paul N. – Education Finance and Policy, 2014
We consider issues of equality and efficiency in two different school funding systems--a state-level system in Michigan and a foundation system in Ohio. Unlike Ohio, the Michigan system restricts districts from generating property or income tax revenue to fund operating expenditures. In both states, districts fund capital expenditures with local…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Educational Equity (Finance), Financial Support, State Aid
Downes, Tom; Killeen, Kieran M. – Education Finance and Policy, 2014
We examine changes in the use of nontax revenues for education finance from 1991 to 2010. Beyond the summary of usage over time, we ask whether nontraditional revenues like fees accentuate or mitigate the impact of downturns. More generally, we examine the extent to which school districts have responded to fiscal pressures by turning to nontax…
Descriptors: Public Education, Educational Finance, Taxes, Educational Equity (Finance)
Dhuey, Elizabeth; Lipscomb, Stephen – Education Finance and Policy, 2013
Several states and the federal government distribute aid for special education programs based primarily on total district enrollment and a fixed aid amount per student, a method called "census funding." In this policy brief, we address three questions to help policy makers, educators, and researchers better understand census-funding…
Descriptors: Special Education, Educational Finance, Educational Policy, Enrollment
Roy, Joydeep – Education Finance and Policy, 2011
Michigan radically altered its school finance system in 1994. The new plan, called Proposal A, significantly increased state aid to the lowest-spending school districts and limited future increases in spending in the highest-spending ones, abolishing local discretion over school spending. I investigate the impact of Proposal A on the distribution…
Descriptors: Evidence, Educational Objectives, State Aid, Finance Reform
Lifting All Boats? Finance Litigation, Education Resources, and Student Needs in the Post-"Rose" Era
Sims, David P. – Education Finance and Policy, 2011
"Rose v. Council for Better Education" (1989) is often considered a transition point in education finance litigation, heralding an era of increasing concern for measurable adequacy of education across a broad spectrum of student needs. Prior research suggests that post-Rose lawsuits had less effect on the distribution of school spending than older…
Descriptors: Student Needs, Court Litigation, Educational Equity (Finance), Educational Finance
Streams, Meg; Butler, J. S.; Cowen, Joshua; Fowles, Jacob; Toma, Eugenia F. – Education Finance and Policy, 2011
Kentucky is a poor, relatively rural state that contrasts greatly with the relatively urban and wealthy states typically the subject of education studies employing large-scale administrative data. For this reason, Kentucky's experience of major school finance and curricular reform is highly salient for understanding teacher labor market dynamics.…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Rural Schools, Finance Reform, Educational Finance
McMillen, Daniel P.; Singell, Larry D., Jr. – Education Finance and Policy, 2010
Prior work uses a parametric approach to study the distributional effects of school finance reform and finds evidence that reform yields greater equality of school expenditures by lowering spending in high-spending districts (leveling down) or increasing spending in low-spending districts (leveling up). We develop a kernel density…
Descriptors: Expenditures, Finance Reform, Educational Finance, Taxes
Ladd, Helen F. – Education Finance and Policy, 2008
Within the context of the school finance literature, the concepts of equity and adequacy raise a number of complex definitional and pragmatic issues. The purpose of this article is to clarify those issues and to use those concepts to evaluate the recent policy proposal called weighted student funding (WSF). Though WSF contains some…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Educational Equity (Finance), Financial Support, Financial Policy
Satz, Debra – Education Finance and Policy, 2008
In this article I argue that the distinction between an adequate education and an equal education has been overdrawn. In my view, a certain type of equality--civic equality--is internal to the idea of educational adequacy. An education system that completely separates the children of the poor and minorities from those of the wealthy and middle…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Educational Quality, Democracy, Educational Finance
Strike, Kenneth A. – Education Finance and Policy, 2008
This article discusses issues of justice concerning school finance with a focus on the development of a conception of equality of educational opportunity. Emphasis is put on discussing the views of the other contributors in this symposium. The main conclusions of the discussion are that (1) equity and adequacy are not inconsistent views because…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Educational Equity (Finance), Equal Education, Educational Quality
Johnson, William R. – Education Finance and Policy, 2006
This article estimates the dollar amount of public higher education subsidies received by U.S. youth and examines the distribution of subsidies and the taxes that finance them across parental and student income levels. Although youths from high-income families obtain more benefit from higher education subsidies, high-income households pay…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Family Income, Taxes, Financial Support
Wilson, Kathryn; Lambright, Kristina; Smeeding, Timothy M. – Education Finance and Policy, 2006
This article breaks new ground in the debate on school finance and equality of per pupil school expenditures. We are able to merge school district data with the individual and family data of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID). This allows us to examine both student and school district characteristics and to assess several measures of…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Racial Differences, School Districts, Educational Opportunities
Schmidt, Stephen J.; Scott, Karen – Education Finance and Policy, 2006
In 1997, Vermont passed Act 60, which reformed its education finance system to achieve greater equality of spending. The reform encouraged wealthy towns to reduce spending; it was politically unpopular and was replaced, in 2004, by Act 68. We analyze the spending incentives created by the two acts and estimate the effects the change will have on…
Descriptors: Incentives, Taxes, State Legislation, Educational Finance
Rebell, Michael A. – Education Finance and Policy, 2006
In recent years, state legislatures, state education departments, and advocacy groups in more than thirty states have sponsored education adequacy studies, which aim to determine objectively the amount of funding needed to provide all students with a meaningful opportunity for an adequate education. Based on a detailed analysis of judicial and…
Descriptors: Criticism, Educational Finance, Educational Quality, Costs
Taylor, Lori L. – Education Finance and Policy, 2006
A Comparable Wage Index (CWI) is an attractive mechanism for measuring geographic variations in the cost of education. A CWI measures uncontrollable variations in educator pay by observing systematic variations in the earnings of comparable workers who are not educators. Together, the 2000 census and the Occupational Employment Statistics survey…
Descriptors: Wages, School Districts, Employment Statistics, Educational Equity (Finance)
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