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Martorell, Paco; Stange, Kevin; McFarlin, Isaac, Jr. – Grantee Submission, 2016
Public investments in repairs, modernization, and construction of schools cost billions. However, little is known about the nature of school facility investments, whether it actually changes the physical condition of public schools, and the subsequent causal impacts on student achievement. We study the achievement effects of nearly 1,400 capital…
Descriptors: Public Support, Investment, Financial Support, Public Schools
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Vicknair, David; Wright, Jeffrey – American Journal of Business Education, 2015
Evidence of confusion in intermediate accounting textbooks regarding the annual percentage rate (APR) and annual effective rate (AER) is presented. The APR and AER are briefly discussed in the context of a note payable and correct formulas for computing each is provided. Representative examples of the types of confusion that we found is presented…
Descriptors: Accounting, Business Administration Education, Textbook Content, Textbook Evaluation
Warden, Dan; Palsma, Abigail Stokes – School Business Affairs, 2012
If a school district has more than $10 million in tax-exempt debt, inclusive of all outstanding bonds, certificates of participation, and other public debt issues with durations of more than nine months, it must comply with the contractual requirements entered into under Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rules. District administrators and…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Debt (Financial), Compliance (Legal), Bond Issues
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Bowers, Alex J.; Lee, Jooyoung – Educational Administration Quarterly, 2013
Purpose: Across the United States, a large percentage of school districts are in need of facility improvements to provide safe and adequate buildings to facilitate student learning. To finance new construction, school districts traditionally have put proposals before local voters to fund construction through issuing long-term bonds to finance…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Educational Facilities, Bond Issues, Longitudinal Studies
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Frantz, J. Thomas – Education, 2014
Many contemporary superintendents face a new challenge, one of ensuring that the school buildings in their school districts are safe, sound, and conducive to offering the educational programs found in twenty-first century classrooms. Despite the growing need to upgrade the physical plants in many school districts, few superintendents have the…
Descriptors: Superintendents, Educational Facilities Improvement, Architecture, Boards of Education
Erickson, Paul W. – American School & University, 2011
When a bond referendum comes around for a school district, it often is the culmination of years of planning, strategizing and communicating to the public. Especially in these economic times, passing a building referendum is challenging. Complete transparency among the superintendent, school board and community is essential to communicate the…
Descriptors: Elections, Bond Issues, Boards of Education, Educational Finance
Kreiser, Donna L.; Cowburn, Laura – School Business Affairs, 2010
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has announced that post-issuance tax compliance is among its highest priorities. This is supported by the recently imposed annual reporting requirement on nonprofit corporations regarding the application and use of tax-exempt bonds issued for their benefit. School districts issuing tax-exempt bonds often spend…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Bond Issues, Compliance (Legal), School Districts
Geier, Brett A. – School Business Affairs, 2012
During the past several years, school district personnel have faced an arduous task of convincing a local electorate--including those who are not directly associated with local schools--to increase its own tax rate. Convincing demographic groups that have a vital interest in improving school facilities can be an easier task. Parents who want to…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Tax Rates, Bond Issues, Tax Effort
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Carpenter, Dick M., II; Clouse, Wendi – Journal of New Approaches in Educational Research, 2013
Almost half of the states in the United States allow citizens to make educational policy through ballot issues, a mechanism of direct democracy. Yet, no study has attempted analyze the educational ballot issue landscape, meaning little systematic attention has been paid to this important and increasingly influential form of educational policy…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Bond Issues, Democracy, State Policy
Van Meter, Christine M. – School Business Affairs, 2011
Issuing long-term debt can be a complex, multifaceted process. Although the process varies by stare, typically the school business official and the district solicitor work with the financing ream, which includes a financial adviser, bond counsel, underwriter, raring agency, and possibly a bond insurance agent, paying agent, and architect.…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Debt (Financial), School Business Officials, Fundamental Concepts
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Vicknair, David – American Journal of Business Education, 2012
By convention U.S. bond markets announce the actual price of a bond as the sum the quoted price plus accrued interest. The economic meaning of accrued interest and its role in this price announcing convention is generally misunderstood by accounting textbook authors who mistakenly provide accrued interest with both an economic and administrative…
Descriptors: Bond Issues, Accounting, Credit (Finance), Cost Indexes
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Harris, Mary H.; Munley, Vincent G. – Education Finance and Policy, 2011
One distinction between the markets for corporate and municipal bonds involves institutional constraints that apply to some municipal bond issues. This research focuses on how public finance institutions, in particular explicit debt limits and referenda requirements, affect the borrowing cost of individual school district bond issues. The…
Descriptors: Debt (Financial), Bond Issues, School Districts, Costs
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Balzer, Wayne E. – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2015
This case, inspired by a real school district scenario, was developed for use in a graduate-level course in school finance. James Spencer had just been selected as the new superintendent of a low-income, 400-student, rural school district in need of many capital improvements. The previous superintendent had refused to hold a bond election because…
Descriptors: School Districts, Vignettes, Graduate Study, Graduate Students
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Secrest, Thomas W. – American Journal of Business Education, 2012
Having returned to teaching the basics of pricing fixed-income securities after several years, the author recalls the difficulty students have in understanding the total return provided by fixed-income securities that are purchased at either a discount or premium from face value. This teaching note attempts to clarify the concept by suggesting…
Descriptors: Bond Issues, Business Administration Education, Concept Teaching, Teaching Methods
Beja, Marc – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Nearly three years ago, in a span of just nine months, the North Harris Montgomery Community College District lost a bond referendum and its chancellor. Nine months later, the Houston-area district had a new leader, a new name, and a victorious bond issue. And this May--a year after the successful bond vote--the college bought an office complex…
Descriptors: Bond Issues, Community Colleges, School Community Relationship, Institutional Advancement
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