NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 9 results Save | Export
Spalding, Audrey – Mackinac Center for Public Policy, 2013
This study examines the use of Schools of Choice throughout Michigan over the last decade. Nearly 100,000 Michigan students use Schools of Choice to attend a school outside of the district in which they live. Participation has grown steadily, with enrollment growing by 144 percent over the past 10 years. This study finds that students enter…
Descriptors: Public Schools, School Choice, Student Participation, Enrollment Rate
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Strauss, Robert P. – Journal of Education Finance, 1995
Summarizes arguments for and against replacing the local school property tax by a local school income tax. Explores the empirical effects of such policies for New York State. Using a 3% income tax and refashioning state aid to a foundation level of $8,068 per pupil would not require substantial new state revenues. (38 footnotes) (MLH)
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, Finance Reform, Funding Formulas
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Geske, Terry G. – Journal of Education Finance, 1984
Analyzes data on the economic prospects of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin--including demographic and economic trends, trends in taxation systems, school revenue and expenditure trends, and future revenue prospects--and offers prognoses for individual states. Generally, short-range revenue prospects are bleak, and long-range…
Descriptors: Demography, Economic Change, Educational Finance, Expenditure per Student
PDF pending restoration PDF pending restoration
Bothwell, Robert O.; Costello, Jack – 1974
The five States represented include Florida, Michigan, Wisconsin, Kansas, and California. For each State the data are presented in terms of the changes occurring in State aid/pupil, the changes in local revenues/pupil, and the changes in local school property tax rates. A final column lists the change in total taxable property for schools, 1972-73…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Finance Reform, School Taxes, State Aid
Caesar, Gene; And Others – 1973
Under the plan described in this report--a so-called "Equal Yield" formula contained in Senate Bill No. 110--each district will have an equal opportunity to realize the same amount of revenue per pupil from each unit or "mill" of local tax levied in combined State and local funds. The publication examines in detail several key…
Descriptors: Conferences, Educational Finance, Educational Legislation, Elementary Schools
Levin, Betsy; And Others – 1972
Detailed information is provided on each of eight states included in a study of selected education finance characteristics. The eight states are Delaware, North Carolina, and Washington (States with a high level of state funding relative to total state-local funds for education); New York, Michigan, and California (moderate state aid states); and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Comparative Analysis, Educational Finance, Expenditure per Student
Levin, Betsy; And Others – 1972
Among the major objectives of this study was the determination of the nature and extent of disparities in revenues and expenditures among a group of selected states, and among type of districts within and across these states. A common pattern in education finance characteristics was found within each type of district, particularly among central…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Educational Finance, Educational Needs, Expenditures
Anderson, Patrick L.; Watkins, Scott D.; Cotton, Christopher S. – 2003
The research reported in this document was undertaken to determine the relative costs of educating a child in a charter school and a traditional public school in Michigan. To assess the costs, the following research was done: a review of the laws that govern public schools in Michigan; a review of the statutes that govern the funding of public…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Economics of Education, Educational Finance, Educational Legislation
Park, Rolla Edward; Carroll, Stephen J. – 1982
This study analyzes the effectiveness of a "guaranteed tax base" (GTB) as a reform measure designed to reduce the traditional heavy reliance of school financing on local property tax revenues and to help equalize per pupil expenditures across districts. Such measures call for matching locally raised tax dollars with state aid and…
Descriptors: Cross Sectional Studies, Data Analysis, Elementary Secondary Education, Estimation (Mathematics)