Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 4 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 27 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 37 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 37 |
Descriptor
COVID-19 | 37 |
Educational Finance | 37 |
Pandemics | 36 |
Elementary Secondary Education | 17 |
Equal Education | 15 |
Federal Aid | 15 |
School Districts | 14 |
State Aid | 12 |
Federal Legislation | 10 |
Resource Allocation | 10 |
State Policy | 10 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Lafortune, Julien | 5 |
Gao, Niu | 4 |
Hough, Heather | 3 |
Estrada-Miller, Jeimee | 2 |
Hahnel, Carrie | 2 |
Hill, Laura | 2 |
Kim, Yoonjeon | 2 |
Knight, David S. | 2 |
Marsh, Julie | 2 |
Mehlotra, Radhika | 2 |
Montoya, Elena | 2 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Policymakers | 4 |
Teachers | 1 |
Location
California | 37 |
Illinois | 5 |
New York | 5 |
Texas | 5 |
Georgia | 3 |
New Mexico | 3 |
North Carolina | 3 |
Ohio | 3 |
Virginia | 3 |
Colorado | 2 |
Connecticut | 2 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Ruthie Caparas; Lisa Eisenberg; Kelsey Krausen; Cosette Lias – WestEd, 2024
Through its "Master Plan for Kids' Mental Health," California has invested $4.7 billion in youth mental and behavioral health since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Expanding behavioral health services on school campuses has been a powerful way to ensure equitable access to this support. However, most of the state's new behavioral…
Descriptors: Sustainability, School Health Services, Mental Health, Needs Assessment
Denisa Gándara; Meredith S. Billings; Paul G. Rubin; Lindsey Hammond – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2024
Prior studies have documented the pattern of decreased state funding for higher education in periods of economic contraction (i.e., the balance wheel phenomenon). This qualitative case study examines how policymakers in California and Texas made decisions about funding higher education at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, when policymakers faced…
Descriptors: State Aid, Higher Education, COVID-19, Pandemics
Serena C. Klempin; Sarah Griffin; Tia J. Monahan; Megan N. Anderson; Thomas Brock – Community College Research Center, Teachers College, Columbia University, 2024
In order to assist higher education institutions and their students during the pandemic, the federal government established the Higher Education Emergency Relief (HEER) Fund, which directed over $75 billion to institutions of higher education--including nearly $25 billion to community colleges--over a three-year period. The U.S. Department of…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Federal Aid, Community Colleges
Maier, Anna; Rivera-Rodriguez, Adrian – Learning Policy Institute, 2023
The community schools strategy transforms a school into a place where educators, local community members, families, and students work together to strengthen conditions for student learning and healthy development. As partners, they organize in- and out-of-school resources, supports, and opportunities so that young people thrive. A growing number…
Descriptors: Community Schools, Educational Strategies, State Policy, Investment
Jacob Jackson; Kevin Cook; Darriya Starr – Public Policy Institute of California, 2022
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted higher education in California, forcing students and institutions to adapt rapidly to the public health and economic crisis. Institutions' revenue streams were predicted to decline just as new and increased costs for health, safety, and online education burdened budgets. The federal government provided over $10…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Finance, Financial Support

Stephanie Barton – Grantee Submission, 2023
To jump-start educational recovery after the disruptions from COVID-19, the federal and state governments sent billions in one-time stimulus funds to school districts. California allocated much of its stimulus funding to districts based on their shares of low-income students--a proxy for student need and the main way California directs money…
Descriptors: State Aid, Educational Finance, Financial Support, COVID-19
Hahnel, Carrie; Baumgardner, Christina – Policy Analysis for California Education, PACE, 2022
The method California uses to count students for funding purposes is an important decision that drives both resources and behaviors. For more than 100 years, California has funded school districts based on the average number of students who attend school each day. Although this average daily attendance (ADA) method was once used by many states,…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Financial Support, State Aid, Average Daily Attendance
Syverson, Eric – Education Commission of the States, 2021
This Policy Snapshot provides examples of legislation in 13 states that have proposed or enacted legislation addressing the following principles of K-12 funding models: attendance and enrollment, revenue, and equity-based initiatives. All 50 states allocate K-12 funding in different ways. Refer to this two-page reference guide, which defines and…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Legislation
Center for Public Education, National School Boards Association, 2021
Hold-harmless provisions in state aid formulas are meant to restrict declines in revenues for school districts. They may take several forms, including limits on the changes in state aid from year to year, supplemental funding for districts with declining enrollment, alternatives for calculating the state aid amount, or use of past enrollments in…
Descriptors: State Aid, Educational Finance, School Districts, Declining Enrollment
EdSource, 2020
Parents, students and school communities have been forced to respond to the COVID-19 crisis in unprecedented ways. What are their reactions to the responses by school districts and state officials to this crisis? How has this affected their feelings about state government and how are families faring as they face challenges like distance learning?…
Descriptors: Educational Attitudes, Public Opinion, Parent Attitudes, COVID-19
Otto, Rafael – Grantmakers for Education, 2020
How can funders create a grantmaking strategy that puts them in a position to quickly and effectively respond to unpredictable challenges? This case study follows strategy redevelopment for The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation's education program. The re-envisioning of the strategy ensured the education program team could be nimble and…
Descriptors: Grants, Philanthropic Foundations, Private Financial Support, Educational Finance
Abigail Slovick; Bruce Fuller; Ja'Nya Banks; Chunhan Huang; Carla Bryant – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2024
Policy makers in California intend to provide free preschool to all 4-year-olds solely within public schools by 2026, becoming the nation's second largest single pre-K program in the United States after Head Start. This initiative builds on the state's existing Transitional Kindergarten (TK) option that has served a modest share of 4-year-olds…
Descriptors: Race, Racial Differences, Preschool Education, Equal Education
Finkel, Ed – Community College Journal, 2020
Capital investment on community college campuses had grown increasingly tricky to calculate correctly even before the coronavirus pandemic, as enrollment fluctuated, more students took online courses and employer needs continuously changed. To date, COVID-19 hasn't radically altered anyone's planning. But with that added factor thrown into the…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Community Colleges, Leadership Responsibility
Powell, Anna; Chávez, Raúl; Austin, Lea; Montoya, Elena; Kim, Yoonjeon; Copeman Petig, Abby – Center for the Study of Child Care Employment, 2022
This report provides a closer look at the well-being of the early care and education (ECE) workforce in California, using data collected by the Center for the Study of Child Care Employment (CSCCE) through the 2020 California Early Care and Education Workforce Study. For decades, low levels of public investment in this sector have kept the ECE…
Descriptors: Child Care, Early Childhood Education, Labor Force, COVID-19
Yuen, Victoria – Center for American Progress, 2020
The coronavirus pandemic has led to the most difficult semester in generations on college campuses across the United States. With that semester now wrapping up, public colleges and universities are facing costs that already dwarf the $7.6 billion in federal stimulus funds that are on their way to these institutions. Absent dramatic new action from…
Descriptors: School Closing, Public Colleges, Higher Education, Budgets