Friday, February 22, 2013

A drop in a half empty bucket? In defense of deprivation in NY | School Finance 101

A drop in a half empty bucket? In defense of deprivation in NY | School Finance 101:


A drop in a half empty bucket? In defense of deprivation in NY

First, here’s a primer and reading list on the Empire State of School Finance:
  1. New York State maintains one of the least equitable state school finance systems in the nation
  2. New York State actually allocates a ton of state aid to districts that need it least, exacerbating the disparities
  3. Reformy types in New York State thought, under these circumstances, it would be really cool to make any additional state aid a district receives contingent on adopting a teacher evaluation scheme based on their documented deeply flawed metrics!
  4. To ice that reformy cake, the legislature saw fit to – after slashing state aid year after year – impose a local property tax limit on districts so that they are unable to even raise the funds they would need to provide a sound basic education, if they could raise those funds locally.
ohhh… but I’m just getting started here.  Then came the lawsuits. That’s what makes this so fun and interesting