“You end up with few alternatives but to have it hit the classroom in
one way or another,” said McKell Withers, superintendent of schools in
Salt Lake City, where inflation-adjusted per-student spending fell 10
percent between 2009 and 2012. “Everything that we could do to try to
buffer the impact is now dried up and gone.”
The recent cuts represent a sharp reversal after decades of rising
U.S. education spending. In 1950, American school districts spent, on
average, roughly $1,800 per student. Spending has risen nearly every
year since then; by 2006-07, the last full school year before the
recession, per-student spending was nearly $11,000. (Both figures have
been adjusted for inflation.) The long increase reflected a range of
factors, among them higher teacher salaries, broader curricular and
extracurricular offerings, and, especially in recent years, increased
spending on students with disabilities. Another major factor: smaller
class sizes. In the 1950s, there were roughly 25 students for every
teacher; by 2007, the ratio had fallen to 15.5-to-one.
The recent reversal has been modest by historical standards.
Nationally, the student-teacher ratio is now 16-to-one, the same level
as in 2000, and per-student spending is at about $10,600, roughly the
2006 level after adjusting for inflation. Primary and secondary schools
were far from the only government program to face the budget axe in
recent years; state funding for higher education, in particular, has
suffered
even bigger cuts.
But school financing has been slow to rebound even as the economy
improves. Detailed funding data for more recent years isn’t yet
available, but a
recent analysis
of state budgets from the Center on Budget Policy and Priorities, a
left-leaning think tank, found that at least 35 states spent less per
student in the 2013-14 school year than they did before the recession.
Between June 2009, when the recession ended, and November 2012, the
lowest point for local education employment, districts cut nearly
350,000 workers. They’ve hired fewer than 40,000 of them back since then
— a slower rebound than other local government employees, such as
firefighters and police officers.
“The kids who started kindergarten in fall of 2007, these kids are in
sixth grade now,” said Noelle Ellerson, associate executive director of
the American Association of School Administrators. “Half of their
educational experience in the K-12 system has not been in prerecession
funding levels.”
The cuts haven’t been evenly distributed. Most federal education aid
targets two groups, low-income and special education students, who are
overrepresented in urban school districts. As a result, urban districts
have been hit harder by the recent cuts. (For the same reason, urban
districts also disproportionately benefited from the stimulus.) Overall,
64 percent of the nation’s more than 14,000 school districts spent less
per student in 2012 than in 2009, after adjusting for inflation. But 82
percent of urban districts cut funding; in cities with populations of
250,000 or more, 89 percent of districts cut funding.
In many cities, budget cuts have been compounded by a separate,
long-standing problem: falling student enrollments. Many U.S. cities,
particularly in the East and Midwest, have seen their populations
decline in recent decades, particularly among residents with school-age
children. More recently, many urban school districts have faced
increased competition from charter schools, which are publicly funded
but operate independently of cities’ main school systems.
Kansas City, Missouri, for example, has seen enrollment in its public
schools cut in half over the past decade, from nearly 39,000 in 2002 to
less than 17,000 in 2012. The steep decline in enrollment left the city
with cavernous, costly buildings capable of holdings tens of thousands
more students than it actually had. But like many districts, Kansas City
was slow to adjust, continuing to operate half-empty buildings rather
than grapple with the painful and controversial process of school
closures.
When the post-recession budget cuts hit, the reckoning finally came: Kansas City was forced to
slash spending across the board,
closing dozens of schools, laying off hundreds of employees and paring
back or eliminating arts, athletics and other programs. Per-student
spending fell by a third between 2009 and 2012 because of budget cuts at
the local, state and federal levels. Closing schools and cutting
expenses helped the district address its budget challenges, but not
without cost. In 2012, the district lost its accreditation and faced a
possible state takeover.
Superintendent R. Stephen Green, who took over in 2011, said that the
worst of the cuts are over and that he is working to restore some of
the classes and programs that were eliminated. The state has
backed off plans
to take control of the district, and Green said he expects to regain at
least provisional accreditation this year. But he said the slow
economic rebound means that even as he is restoring some programs, he
is cutting others.
“I think we see some light at the end of the tunnel,” Green said.
But, he added, “as goes the economy, so goes that possibility.”
1 comment:
Do gone it, it isn't about how much we spend on education or teacher- student ratios. We just need to get everyone teaching this common core correctly and getting rid of all the bad teachers and then everything else will just work itself out. Darn rich teacher/administrators (at least the ones who are still employed).
Post a Comment