Meeting student needs: Creating an equitable school funding system in Illinois

Similar documents
FY year and 3-year Cohort Default Rates by State and Level and Control of Institution

medicaid and the How will the Medicaid Expansion for Adults Impact Eligibility and Coverage? Key Findings in Brief

TRENDS IN. College Pricing

Trends in College Pricing

About the College Board. College Board Advocacy & Policy Center

Trends in Higher Education Series. Trends in College Pricing 2016

Redirected Inbound Call Sampling An Example of Fit for Purpose Non-probability Sample Design

Junior (61-90 semester hours or quarter hours) Two-year Colleges Number of Students Tested at Each Institution July 2008 through June 2013

2016 Match List. Residency Program Distribution by Specialty. Anesthesiology. Barnes-Jewish Hospital, St. Louis MO

Anatomy and Physiology. Astronomy. Boomilever. Bungee Drop

Greta Bornemann (360) Patty Stephens (360)

Student Admissions, Outcomes, and Other Data

TENNESSEE S ECONOMY: Implications for Economic Development

Brian Isetts University of Minnesota - Twin Cities, Anthony W. Olson PharmD University of Minnesota, Twin Cities,

Multi-Year Guaranteed Annuities

NC Community College System: Overview

Career Services JobFlash! as of July 26, 2017

Canada and the American Curriculum:

2013 TRIAL URBAN DISTRICT ASSESSMENT (TUDA) RESULTS

EPA Approved Laboratories for UCMR 3

ILLINOIS DISTRICT REPORT CARD

Update Peer and Aspirant Institutions

ILLINOIS DISTRICT REPORT CARD

Findings from the 2005 College Student Survey (CSS): National Aggregates. Victor B. Saenz Douglas S. Barrera

93 percent of local providers will not be awarded competitive bidding contracts 2.

Financing Education In Minnesota

Rural Education in Oregon

The Demographic Wave: Rethinking Hispanic AP Trends

Wisconsin 4 th Grade Reading Results on the 2015 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)

STRONG STANDARDS: A Review of Changes to State Standards Since the Common Core

Transportation Equity Analysis

Teach For America alumni 37,000+ Alumni working full-time in education or with low-income communities 86%

Jon N. Kerr, PhD, CPA August 2017

Iowa School District Profiles. Le Mars

RAISING QUALITY PROMOTING EQUITY

136 Joint Commission Accredited Organizations (1273 sites*) with Primary Care Medical Home (PCMH) Certification (by state) as of 1/1/2015

Michigan and Ohio K-12 Educational Financing Systems: Equality and Efficiency. Michael Conlin Michigan State University

Shelters Elementary School

Higher Education Six-Year Plans

Suggested Citation: Institute for Research on Higher Education. (2016). College Affordability Diagnosis: Maine. Philadelphia, PA: Institute for

The Relationship Between Poverty and Achievement in Maine Public Schools and a Path Forward

THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL IMPACT OF APPRENTICESHIP PROGRAMS

STATE CAPITAL SPENDING ON PK 12 SCHOOL FACILITIES NORTH CAROLINA

Coming in. Coming in. Coming in

A Correlational Study Between The Amount Of Property Wealth Behind Each Student Attending Florida District Schools And The Acade

Invest in CUNY Community Colleges

EDUCATION TEACHING EXPERIENCE

Memorandum RENEWAL OF ACCREDITATION. School School # City State # of Years Effective Date

Curriculum Vitae. Sara C. Steele, Ph.D, CCC-SLP 253 McGannon Hall 3750 Lindell Blvd., St. Louis, MO Tel:

King-Devick Reading Acceleration Program

Chapter Six The Non-Monetary Benefits of Higher Education

Academic Employment Emporia State University, Associate Professor with tenure, 2012 present Emporia State University, Assistant Professor,

An Introduction to School Finance in Texas

Financial aid: Degree-seeking undergraduates, FY15-16 CU-Boulder Office of Data Analytics, Institutional Research March 2017

Council on Postsecondary Education Funding Model for the Public Universities (Excluding KSU) Bachelor's Degrees

B.A., Amherst College, Women s and Gender Studies, Magna Cum Laude (2001)

ACCESS TO SUCCESS IN AMERICA: Where are we? What Can We Learn from Colleges on the Performance Frontier?

RAISING ACHIEVEMENT BY RAISING STANDARDS. Presenter: Erin Jones Assistant Superintendent for Student Achievement, OSPI

John F. Kennedy Middle School

Psychometric Research Brief Office of Shared Accountability

5 Programmatic. The second component area of the equity audit is programmatic. Equity

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Office for State, Tribal, Local and Territorial Support, Public Health Law Program

Trends in Tuition at Idaho s Public Colleges and Universities: Critical Context for the State s Education Goals

Understanding University Funding

Cooper Upper Elementary School

A Snapshot of the Graduate School

Multicultural Education: Perspectives and Theory. Multicultural Education by Dr. Chiu, Mei-Wen

DFL School Board Bio. Claudia Swanson

Executive Summary. Laurel County School District. Dr. Doug Bennett, Superintendent 718 N Main St London, KY

Governors and State Legislatures Plan to Reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act

1.0 INTRODUCTION. The purpose of the Florida school district performance review is to identify ways that a designated school district can:

History of CTB in Adult Education Assessment

CHAPTER 4: REIMBURSEMENT STRATEGIES 24

Estimating the Cost of Meeting Student Performance Standards in the St. Louis Public Schools

National Child Passenger Safety Certification Training Program. Planning and Logistics Guide

JANIE HODGE, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Special Education 225 Holtzendorff Clemson University

The Economic Impact of College Bowl Games

NETWORK DEVELOPMENT GRANTEES

The newly revised NCSSFL-ACTFL Can-Do Statements offer language educators a

DUAL ENROLLMENT ADMISSIONS APPLICATION. You can get anywhere from here.

Financial Education and the Credit Behavior of Young Adults

DIRECT CERTIFICATION AND THE COMMUNITY ELIGIBILITY PROVISION (CEP) HOW DO THEY WORK?

Cuero Independent School District

Sunnyvale Middle School School Accountability Report Card Reported Using Data from the School Year Published During

The number of involuntary part-time workers,

Minnesota s Consolidated State Plan Under the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)

Description of Program Report Codes Used in Expenditure of State Funds

PEER AND BENCHMARK COMPARISON GROUPS UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI I 2012

Personnel Administrators. Alexis Schauss. Director of School Business NC Department of Public Instruction

President Abraham Lincoln Elementary School

No Child Left Behind Bill Signing Address. delivered 8 January 2002, Hamilton, Ohio

Certificate of Qualitative Research Methods in Education (15 credits) Certificate in Grant Writing and Proposal Development (Workshop series)

Rethinking the Federal Role in Elementary and Secondary Education

YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO JOIN THE EAGL ZETA COHORT, STARTING IN JUNE COMPLETE YOUR APPLICATION ONLINE AT:

Gena Bell Vargas, Ph.D., CTRS

ASCD Recommendations for the Reauthorization of No Child Left Behind

46 Children s Defense Fund

University-Based Induction in Low-Performing Schools: Outcomes for North Carolina New Teacher Support Program Participants in

Effectiveness and Successful Program Elements of SOAR s Afterschool Programs

Trends & Issues Report

Transcription:

Meeting student needs: Creating an equitable school funding system in Illinois Senator Andy Manar Presentation to the Governor's Commission on School Funding Reform September 7, 2016

We need an equitable funding system to ensure every child has resources needed to achieve What is equity and why is it essential? How do we understand adequacy through equity? How will we know if we ve created an equitable system? What s the role of revenue in creating an equitable system? 2

What is equity and why is it essential? 3

Some students need additional supports. Third Graders Reading at Grade Level Equal Supports Equitable Supports

What does equity mean? An equitable system takes into account the needs of students and provides them with resources they need to achieve. Low-income students, English Learners, and Special Needs students have greater needs. In an equitable system per-pupil funding increases as the number of low-income, EL, and special needs students increase. 5

Equitable funding can help close achievement gaps But to close achievement gaps, schools need funding that is equitable funding that accounts for the fact that it simply costs more to educate low-income students, many of whom start school academically behind their more affluent peers. Beyond standard curricula, these schools may need, for example, materials to help build vocabulary and background knowledge, extra learning time, or liaisons with outside service providers, such as the healthcare or foster care systems. Source: The Education Trust, Funding Gaps 2015, March 2015 6

Is Illinois' system equitable? For each dollar spent on non-low-income students 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% -5% -10% -15% -20% -25% Ohio spends $1.22 on low-income students IL spends $0.81 on lowincome students OH MN SD DE TN IN KY CA MA LA NJ GA OK UT WI OR WV MS WA CT AR FL NM ND VT SC KS CO VA AZ AL NH NE ME WY RI ID MO MT IA NC MI MD TX PA NY IL NOTE: Low-income students are defined as those quo qualify for free or reduced-priced lunch. Source: Funding Gaps, Education Trust, 2015 Illinois has the most inequitable funding system in the country 7

Illinois faces some of the largest income-based achievement gaps Low-income achievement gap: students at or above proficient, 2015 NAEP. Percent at or above proficient 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 55% Not-Low-Income Low-Income 35 47% percentage point gap 29 percentage point gap 20% 18% 0% 4th Grade Reading 8th Grade Math Source: NAEP 2015. 8

Illinois also has among the largest racial achievement gaps in the country, but minority growth outpaces white growth 4 TH Grade Reading Proficiency 8 TH Grade Math Proficiency 2015 Gaps Black/White: 31pp Latino/White: 23pp 2015 Gaps Black/White: 20pp Latino/White: 11pp 46 31 15 23 11 20 White Black Latino White Black Latino

And provides $2,000 less per student for districts with the most students of color $10,842 $12,882 Source: Education Trust Schools with Most Students of Color Schools with Fewest Students of Color Spending per Student in Illinois 2012 10

More districts are dealing with concentrated poverty: 44% of districts over 50% low-income, up from 13% in 2005 High concentration of poverty may also be proxy for deeper poverty, meaning students may have even greater needs 11

The number of English Learners is growing across the state... Since 2005 the number of school districts serving at least 10% EL has doubled ELs need additional native language supports 12

And districts across the state continue to work with students with diverse learning needs 13

In an equitable system, student need determines adequacy 14

Adequacy is the amount it takes to educate a child In an equitable system, adequacy will be higher for children with greater needs. English Learners Low-income students Students with special needs 15

Spending varies drastically between neighboring districts, but not based on need. Aurora East Low-income: 99% English Learners: 38% Spending per pupil: $11,335 Naperville Low-income: 15% English Learners: 4.2% Spending per pupil: $14,545 16

Champaign County: Champaign and Rantoul Champaign Low-income: 52% English Learners: 7.2% Spending per pupil: $13,200 Rantoul Low-income: 89% English Learners: 15.9% Spending per pupil: $10,429 17

Lake County Zion and Lake Bluff Zion Low-income: 82% English Learners: 17% Spending per pupil: $11,093 Lake Bluff Low-income: 10% English Learners: 6.1% Spending per pupil: $19,011 18

How will we know if we created an equitable system? 19

An equitable system would ensure... Adequacy target is proportionally higher for districts based on concentration of poverty, English Learners, and diverse learners All districts are funded at a similar percent of their adequacy target, including state and local resources Equity funding gaps are closed and remain closed over time Property-poor districts are not over-burdened 20

If we don't deliberately invest in equity, it can take 15 years to reach equal funding Non-lowincome students Non-lowincome students $1,500 $500M Additional Funding 15 YEARS ONLY GETS US TO EQUAL $300 Low-income students Low-income students 21

But with a greater focus on equity, we can get there in five years with the same investment Non-lowincome students Non-lowincome students $1,500 $500M Additional Funding 5 YEARS ONLY GETS US TO EQUAL $400 Low-income students Low-income students 22

How do we move toward equity in spending? The gap in spending between low-income and non-low-income students is estimated at $1,500 per pupil We can close the gap in five years by spending $300 more on lowincome students than non-low-income students each year If we create a system that distributes $400 per low-income student and $100 per non-low-income student each year, we will get to equal spending in five years If we create a system that distributes $300 per low-income student and $200 per non-low-income student each year, we will get to equal spending in 15 years Both options would cost an additional $500 million per year We must invest to get to equity ensuring students have the resources based on their needs 23

What's the role of revenue in an equitable system? 24

If the system is underfunded, then the system must be more equitable to avoid hurting low income districts District A System Funded at 70% District B EAV per pupil: $100,000 3% Assumed Tax Rate EAV per pupil: $100,000 30% Low Income 70% Low Income $15,000 $15,000 Adequacy Target = $15,000 Adequacy Target = $10,000 $10,000 $10,000 $10,500 $7,000 $5,000 $5,000 $3,000 0 0 $3,000

Questions to Consider How do we account for the needs of student living in the deepest poverty without further constraining local resources? In an underfunded system, what's the best way to drive resources to the neediest students? How do we balance the relationships between revenue and distribution (i.e. the formula), in order to create an equitable system? What are the trade-offs? 26