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Bruce D. Baker; Matthew Di Carlo; Mark Weber – Albert Shanker Institute, 2025
In the United States, K-12 school finance is largely controlled by the states. Every year, hundreds of billions of dollars in public funds are distributed based on 51 different configurations of formulas, rules, and regulations to over 13,000 districts that vary in terms of the students they serve, their ability to raise revenue locally, and many…
Descriptors: State Aid, Educational Finance, School Funds, Funding Formulas
Indira Dammu; Bonnie O'Keefe; Jennifer O'Neal Schiess – Bellwether, 2023
All states have a formula that determines how state funding is distributed to school districts. Most state formulas anticipate or require that school districts raise some funds locally and adjust state allocations based on that anticipated local share of school funding. In theory, state funding formulas attempt to provide school districts with the…
Descriptors: Funding Formulas, State Aid, Resource Allocation, Educational Finance
Alex Spurrier; Bonnie O'Keefe; Jennifer O'Neal Schiess – Bellwether, 2023
Nearly every state has flaws in how it funds public education, particularly when it comes to equitable funding for historically underserved students. While challenges vary by state, there are five common pitfalls in education finance equity: (1) Formulas do not fully account for differences in student learning needs; (2) There are too many school…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, State Aid, Educational Equity (Finance), Funding Formulas
Christopher Candelaria; Anna Moyer – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2023
Background and Context: U.S. schools rely heavily on property tax revenue. Local funding represents more than 45 percent of district-level revenues in the United States, and 60 percent of local funding comes from property taxes (Evans et al., 2019). This funding structure exacerbates educational inequalities between property-rich and property-poor…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Taxes, Educational Equity (Finance), Educational Change
Bruce D. Baker; Matthew Di Carlo; Mark Weber – Albert Shanker Institute, 2024
In the United States, K-12 school finance is largely controlled by the states. Every year, hundreds of billions of dollars in public funds are distributed based on 51 different configurations of formulas, rules, and regulations to over 13,000 districts that vary in terms of the students they serve, their ability to raise revenue locally, and many…
Descriptors: Educational Equity (Finance), Kindergarten, Elementary Secondary Education, Funding Formulas
Fazlul, Ishtiaque; Scafidi, Benjamin – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
During the Great Recession and in the years that immediately followed, previous research has well-documented that U.S. public school districts receiving larger shares of their funding from state governments experienced larger declines in expenditures per student, as the GR impacted state tax bases more than it impacted local tax bases. Using…
Descriptors: Economic Climate, Public Schools, School Districts, Educational Finance
Rex Wall – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The purpose of this quantitative study was to inform local practices in the state of Oklahoma regarding the equitable allocation of resources within school districts by examining the relationship between student per-pupil expenditures at high schools located in an urban district and student outcomes. Significant efforts, both legal and academic,…
Descriptors: Urban Education, Equal Education, High Schools, Resource Allocation
Nathan Favero; Ali Kagalwala – Educational Policy, 2025
States diverge widely when it comes to education funding choices, leading to substantial differences in how much states spend on schooling, the role of local versus state revenue sources, and relative differences among districts in funding levels. Prior studies have documented that Democratic party control of state governments appears to be…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Educational Finance, Ideology, Resource Allocation
The Source Code: Revenue Composition and the Adequacy, Equity, and Stability of K-12 School Spending
Baker, Bruce D.; Di Carlo, Matthew; Oberfield, Zachary W. – Albert Shanker Institute, 2023
School finance debates frequently turn on two crucial questions: (1) How much do state and local governments spend on K-12 education?; and (2) How are education dollars distributed across jurisdictions? This focus makes sense because the answers to these questions determine how well states are able to provide an adequate, equal education for all…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, Income, Educational Equity (Finance)
Indira Dammu; Carrie Hahnel – Bellwether, 2023
State education finance systems play a fundamental role in providing the resources that schools and districts need to ensure student success. But modernizing and improving these systems is often complicated and can take years. Learning from their efforts to revamp education finance systems, Bellwether has found five common conditions that pave the…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Finance, State Aid
Farrie, Danielle; Sciarra, David G. – Education Law Center, 2022
"Making the Grade 2021" analyzes the condition of public school funding in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Using the most recently available data from the 2018-19 school year, the report ranks and grades each state on three measures to answer the key question: How fair is school funding in your state? The three fairness…
Descriptors: Educational Equity (Finance), Public Schools, School Support, State Aid
Coffin, Stephen V., Ed. – Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2023
State school finance formula cause funding inadequacy, allocative inefficiency, and educational resource equity gaps. Legislative and court-ordered remedies have failed to solve the disparities among schools and districts. This book's ground-breaking innovation shows how to shift the public education finance paradigm to fund K-12 public education…
Descriptors: State Aid, Funding Formulas, Kindergarten, Elementary Secondary Education
Indira Dammu; Bonnie O'Keefe; Jennifer O'Neal Schiess – Bellwether, 2023
State funding formulas shape how much money school districts have to spend, but districts usually have considerable discretion with how they distribute funds to schools. Because of this discretion, even if districts receive funds through a highly equitable state system, there is no guarantee that districts will distribute funding equitably to…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, School Districts, Resource Allocation, State Aid
Dammu, Indira; O'Keefe, Bonnie; Schiess, Jennifer O'Neal – Bellwether, 2022
The vast majority of funds for pre-K through grade 12 public schools in the United States -- nearly $800 billion or over 90% -- come from state and local funding sources. States, not school districts, are obligated to ensure that all students have access to the resources they need to succeed. States can take steps to reduce disparities between…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Educational Equity (Finance), State Aid, Public Schools
Zhao, Bo – Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 2021
Connecticut's public K-12 education system relies heavily on local funding, resulting in substantial disparities between affluent districts and low-income districts with a large proportion of socioeconomically disadvantaged students who are more costly to educate. Despite recent improvements, the existing state aid formula has been criticized for…
Descriptors: State Aid, Funding Formulas, School Districts, Elementary Secondary Education