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Joan Malczewski – History of Education Quarterly, 2023
In 1923, Los Angeles teachers protested the state's biennial budget, a controversial document from newly elected governor Friend Richardson that significantly cut funding to government agencies. The budget was the culmination of more than a decade of fiscal policy reform that reflected a significant shift in anti-tax sentiment. The expansion of…
Descriptors: Budgets, Taxes, Financial Policy, State Government
Kyra Caspary; Miya Warner – SRI Education, a Division of SRI International, 2023
The goal of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation's Deeper Learning + Diffusion of Innovation and Scaled Impact Initiative, launched in 2018, was to generate knowledge about how fundamental shifts in teaching and learning could be scaled within public school systems efficiently, expediently, and equitably. The foundation funded 10…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Public Schools, Efficiency, Equal Education
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Youngwan Song; Ross Rubenstein – Research in Higher Education, 2024
While considerable evidence has accumulated on state-funded merit-based scholarships, research on the effects of specific scholarship design choices has been thin, perhaps in part because cross-state comparisons are difficult. As one of the only states to enact major changes in the design of its merit-based scholarship program, Georgia provides a…
Descriptors: College Choice, Scholarships, High School Graduates, Program Design
Stuart Cameron; Sophia D’Angelo; Daniela Gamboa Zapatel; Maria Qureshi – Global Partnership for Education, 2024
Children with disabilities remain among the most excluded from education in Global Partnership for Education (GPE) partner countries and other lower-income countries. Despite considerable activity funded both through GPE and by other donors, as well as by partner countries themselves, the level of international support to inclusive education…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Donors, Developing Nations, Inclusion
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Matthew W. Goddard; Curtis Brundy – College & Research Libraries, 2024
There is a growing acceptance of open access funding models among academic publishers and a growing adoption of open access publishing agreements among academic libraries. In this context, libraries are taking on new roles and new processes to ensure the successful implementation of open access funding initiatives. This article will examine some…
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, Access to Information, Job Analysis, Occupational Information
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Kellen James Adams – Educational Considerations, 2024
The proverbial clock is ticking for many Kansas school buildings, whether due to implications of a complete slowdown due to code compliance, or due to failure of critical systems. Regardless of the reasons, millions of square footage of learning spaces are in jeopardy of no longer being able to serve students in adequate teaching and learning…
Descriptors: School Buildings, Educational Finance, Educational Legislation, State Legislation
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David Levy; Harvey J. Graff – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2024
Historically, it has been difficult for students and their families to compare how different colleges and programs improve students' chances of landing a desirable job and earning a good salary. The U.S. Department of Education's 2015 release of student earning data was a major step toward remedying this problem. The data offered by the College…
Descriptors: College Choice, Income, Outcomes of Education, Education Work Relationship
Stéphane Lavertu – Thomas B. Fordham Institute, 2024
For too long, Ohio underfunded its public charter schools. That policy was unfair to charter school students--many economically disadvantaged--whose educations received less taxpayer support simply by virtue of their choice of schools. It was also unfair to charter schools, which were required to serve children on fewer dollars than the districts…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, High Achievement, Charter Schools, State Aid
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Park, Jae – Smart Learning Environments, 2021
Blockchain is arguably the next technology-mediated socioeconomic mega trend after the ongoing era of Net Neutrality and Big Data. This theoretical paper explores blockchain technology and its impacts on education. It is argued that we cannot take for granted that the network neutrality, popularized accessibility of the "Internet" and…
Descriptors: Technology Uses in Education, Socioeconomic Influences, Educational Finance, Student Projects
Ferguson, Maria – Phi Delta Kappan, 2021
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. Congress has allocated just under $190 billion to support K-12 education. As Maria Ferguson explains, these much-needed funds will require states and districts to make plans for how best to use them, and the planning process is complicated in districts that are already stretched and facing…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Legislation
Kuzmich, Holly – George W. Bush Institute, Education Reform Initiative, 2021
Despite warnings that the school schedule that has been around for more than 100 years is not optimal for serving students' needs, little has changed. The needs of kids and families look very different today than they did 50 years ago. One-size-fits-all prescriptions do not meet the needs of a diverse student population. Rethinking the school…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational Change, School Schedules, Community Needs
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Gilead, Tal – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2019
This article examines how the existence of unpredictability should influence the quest to promote distributive justice in education. First, the article briefly discusses resource allocation in education finance policy and its relationships with existing philosophical theories of distributive justice. It then explains why unpredictability comes…
Descriptors: Justice, Resource Allocation, Educational Finance, Educational Equity (Finance)
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Brighouse, Harry; Mullane, Kailey – Theory and Research in Education, 2023
Christopher Martin argues that an interest in strong autonomy supports a right to debt-free higher education and that making tuition free is the best way of enacting that right. We argue that making higher education tuition free would, in the absence of other countervailing measure, maldistribute strong autonomy, even in ideal conditions. We also…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Access to Education, Higher Education, Educational Finance
Colleen Hroncich – Cato Institute, 2023
The growth of homeschooling from a somewhat fringe movement during the 1970s and 1980s to a more widespread and socially accepted approach in recent decades has provided a strong foundation of flexible learning models. When Florida's school choice expansion, House Bill 1, was introduced in January 2023, one of its goals was to allow more…
Descriptors: Home Schooling, School Choice, Financial Support, School Funds
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McClure, Kevin R.; Fryar, Alisa Hicklin – New Directions for Higher Education, 2020
Recent reporting and research have claimed that some regional public universities are vulnerable, fragile, and endangered. However, much of what we know about the financial conditions of RPUs is limited to cases of financial crisis that capture national attention yet fail to fully represent the sector. The purpose of this chapter is to more deeply…
Descriptors: Public Colleges, Universities, Educational Finance, Financial Problems
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