Monthly Archives: October 2009

Reform Is In The Air

reform1832

Mike Rose at Truthdig has noted that following the extensive and unprecedented federal reach of No Child Left Behind, the Obama administration is attempting to extend this iniative further by putting some some serious money behind a number of education initiatives that invite states and districts to compete for federal dollars. In the K-12 education world, they want, in part, to stimulate better state standards and tests, including the better measurement of teacher effectiveness, while turning around failing schools. One way they want to accomplish this is through an increase in the number of charter schools. At the same time, a third initiative wants to spark innovation and scale up the best of local academic programs.

As Mr. Rose acknowledges, this is a moment of real promise for American education, from kindergarten through college. But he also sounds a note of caution.

Reform is in the air. But within many of these reforms are the seeds of their undoing.

He pointed out that the Education Department has put a lot of stock in charter schools as “engines of innovation,” while noting, importantly, that DOE will not consider a state’s funding proposal if that state has a cap on charters.

Yet a number of research studies — the most recent from Stanford — demonstrate that charter schools, on average, are no better or worse than the regular public schools around them. To be sure, some charters are sites of fresh ideas and robust education, but so are magnet schools, and, lest we forget, so are our regular public schools, ones with strong leadership and a critical mass of good teachers. For the “reformers’” however, charter schools are the recipients of the highest accolades, the rest – not so much.

The Stanford University study shattered the myth of charter school superiority. According to Stanford’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes, students at only 17 percent of charter schools do better on math and reading tests than their demographic peers in regular public schools. Thirty-seven percent do worse, while 46 percent of charter school kids, almost half, perform at approximately the same level as their traditional public school counterparts.

The author of the report concludes:

This study shows that we’ve got a 2-to-1 margin of bad charters to good charters.

The results are especially significant, given that charter schools have built-in advantages – starting with parents that are engaged enough in their children’s education to put them there, in the first place. Yet the actual outcomes, in most cases, fail to live up to the hype.

President Obama and his administration are committed to charter schools. In no small part this policy is driven by Education Secretary Arne Duncan, who was a cheerleader for charters when he ran the Chicago school system, and has threatened to withhold federal education money from the 10 states that don’t yet have charter schools and the 26 other states that put limits on enrollment in charters. Such raw coercion, especially given the results of the Stanford study, seems strongly misguided. This comes in spite of the acknowledgement of the Stanford study on the part of Sec. Duncan, which, he suggests, merely points to the need for greater vigilance. “Charter authorizers need to do a better job of holding schools accountable.”

This administration has said that charter schools are key to educational “reform,” and provide “competition” for traditional schools. But that’s utter nonsense if the educational outcomes are no better, and in many cases worse, than in the regular public schools.

Speaking of “holding [charter] schools accountable,” one would of thought that that was a central argument for the need for charter schools in the first place, an institution free of those ill-principled and wretched teacher unions. Unionized teachers are blamed for much of the ills of education; it’s not a reasoned argument, but a matter of faith – and political prejudice. Charter schools are not private (at least not entirely, if you consider they are chartered by the state), but they are the privatizers’ foot in the door, a wedge issue to demonize unions. And that third leg of the reform movement, so to speak, measurement of teacher effectiveness, is also front and center (see the latest continued plea from the Wisconsin State Journal).

One approach being piloted in a number of education systems around the country is by the non-profit Hope Street Group, and developed by a team of teachers across the U.S., who have proposed recommendations for a smarter evaluation system, imploying more ‘objective’ measures of student achievement, ones that aim to attract and retain teachers, and put America’s schools back on top internationally.

“Policy 2.0: Using Open Innovation to Reform Teacher Evaluation Systems” suggests that in K-12 education, any teacher evaluation system should have the input of teachers and administrators and not solely come from researchers and policymakers. Their specific recommendations include the suggestion that evaluation systems should be frequently revised, that teaching advocates need to be involved in this process, and that any in-class observations for assessment must be done by teachers with sufficient experience.

Lets hope the coming “seeds of change” are not broadcasted, with great hope, onto marginal soil. There is too much at stake for education in this new century.

Robert Godfrey

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Filed under Accountability, AMPS, Arne Duncan, Best Practices, Gimme Some Truth, nclb, No Child Left Behind, Uncategorized, We Are Not Alone

WAES School Funding Reform Update, the Week of October 26, 2009

waesgraphicFrom the Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools. Table of contents below, with related material on AMPS linked to some items.  Click here for the full update.

  • WAES, others groups criticize Governor’s “funding plan”
  • Electors saying no to levy hikes resulting from state budget (and here and here and here)
  • Public, media understand the source of school funding problems
  • State of Washington wants pennies for its kids, too
  • Business leaders back expansion of early childhood education
  • WAES needs renewals, new members to continue work
  • Other states get it … what’s wrong with Wisconsin?
  • Colorado Supreme Court will hear adequacy challenge
  • WAES members take case on funding reform to the public
  • It’s time for America to pay attention to its schools again
  • Help WAES correct e-mail update glitch
  • School-funding reform calendar
  • The Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools (WAES) is a statewide, independent, membership-based organization of educators, school board members, students, parents, community leaders, researchers, citizens, and community activists whose lone goal is the comprehensive reform of Wisconsin’s school-funding system. If you would like more information about the organization — or on becoming part of WAES — contact Tom Beebe at 920-650-0525 or tbeebe@excellentschools.org.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under "education finance", Best Practices, Budget, education, finance, Local News, Pennies for Kids, School Finance, Take Action, Uncategorized, We Are Not Alone

Where is the Money? SFN on “Here and Now”

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Over the weekend the Wisconsin Public Television program “Here and Now” devoted most  their broadcast to education, focusing on the Governor Jim Doyle’s announcements concerning Wisconsin’s application for Race to the Top (RttT) funding.  The only guest to address the questions about the viability of this application at a time when many school districts are struggling with the cuts in state funding in the 2009-11 state budget was Green Lake Superintendent Ken Bates, representing the School Finance Network.  You can watch what Ken had to say above and see all the segments here.

The issues Bates raises are more timely than ever.  In the Governor’s initial announcement that he wanted to buy a lottery ticket for the RttT prize, he included a vague mention of “Allow[ing] districts to increase their spending if they meet specific guidelines to improve education.”

In a release today, there is no mention of funding reform or relief.

Take a look around Governor and see what is happening with school budgets in our state.

Where’s the money?

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under "education finance", Arne Duncan, Budget, education, finance, Local News, School Finance, Uncategorized

Breaking News — MMSD Budget and Levy

At a fairly boring meeting (only one vote was not 7-0;  Beth Moss and Ed Hughes voted against option three, to forgo $3.08 million in maintenance  referendum authority and defer projects, Beth Moss discussed but did not introduce  an amendment halve this to $1.5 million) , the Madison Metropolitan School District Board of Education passed the 2009-10 Budget and tax levy (agenda with linked documents here).

Every option to minimize the property tax levy that was offered was enacted, plus one more from Lucy Mathiak.  The basic strategies were re-budgets to reflect past history and new efficiencies, rescheduling of debt payments, forgoing referendum authority and use of Fund Balance Equity.  Madison will not be taxing to the max.

More than one member offered accurate, detailed and impassioned words about the failure of the state of Wisconsin to meet its obligations for educational investment.  I give Arlene Silveira the points for detail and a tie between Arlene and Marj Passman for passion.  Arlene emphasized the need to hold our elected officials accountable in the coming months.  I’m with her on that…November 1010 elections aren’t that far off.

Probably more on the meeting later.

Here are the details of the budget and levy:

Total Levy — $234,240,964

Fund 10 –$ 218, 955, 521

Property Tax Charge-back — $85,945

Fund 38 – $65,250

Fund 39 – 0

Fund 41 – $6,835,765

Fund 80 – $8,298,483

Mil Rate 10.18 (an increase of .37 over 2008-9)

Impact on $250,000 home = $92.83 higher taxes.

Work on the 2010-11 budget will begin immediately.  It will be hard and it will not be good.

One last note, although I would have liked a more thorough consideration of Fund Balance practices prior to the pasages of this budget, it appears that that will happen before the next budget cycle really kicks in next Spring.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under "education finance", Budget, education, finance, Local News, Referenda, referendum, School Finance, Take Action

Wisconsin School Budget and Tax Levy Roundup

mp_main_half_SchoolMoneySidewalk212Like Madison, many Wisconsin School Districts will be finalizing their 2009-10 budget and tax levies tonight (Monday, October 26, 2009).  Some have previously been highlighted on AMPS — most recently West Bend — , the struggles to deal with declining state funding has been documented in many posts, as has the trend of Not Taxing to the Max to keep property taxes as low as possible but it has been impossible to keep up with all the news.

That’s why I’m offering some linked recent school budget related headlines.  Just reading these gives a good idea of how hard things are for districts.  Click a few and get more of the sad details.

When you are done, click one more link and sent a note to Governor Jim Doyle, your State Senator and your State Representative.  If we don’t pull their heads out of the sand, next year will be even worse and the following years I don’t want to think about.

This is far from comprehensive and they are in no particular order.

Schools see decline in state aid

Rapids School Board approves 12 percent tax rate increase

Higher school property taxes stress Fox Valley homeowners in grips of recession

Despite cuts, West Salem school taxes going up

School superintendents share money woes during forum

Most area school districts lose state aid

District to consider nearly 19 percent levy increase at tonight’s budget hearing

State forces schools to raise taxes

Cuts in aid put more of the burden on taxpayers

Board retools school budget

State aid estimate lowered; tax levy raised

School aid loss hits Chippewa Falls taxpayers

School board reduces tax increase to 11.55 percent

Fewer state dollars blamed for EC school tax hike

Altoona taxpayers to pay more for schools

Osseo-Fairchild school taxes rising 6.2 percent

Portage school deficit goes up; expected millage rate goes down

Decrease in state aid challenges Marshfield-area school districts

Read’em and weep, then get active.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under "education finance", Budget, education, finance, Local News, School Finance, Take Action, Uncategorized

Preventing Future Shocks? MMSD Budgets: Past, Present and Future

MTSparkler600

More from Tesla Downunder

Curtis Mayfield, “Future Shock” (click to listen or download).

On Monday, October 26, 2009 the Madison Metropolitan School District Board of Education will consider and pass budget amendments and finalize the tax levy.  Most of what is before the Board are good solutions to a situation — cuts in state aid combined with a lower than anticipated allowable revenue limit —  that has no great solutions.   I worry that if things aren’t handled correctly there will be future shocks.

Although some information has been made and discussed in public over the last couple of months, the final versions were only released on the afternoon of Friday, October 23.

I note this for two reasons.  First, these are big decisions and the lack of timely information makes it difficult for members of the public to have any effective voice in influencing the Board.  Second, I really haven’t taken as much time as I would like to in studying and considering.  That said, I do want to thank MMSD personnel (in particular Board President Arlene Silveira; Supt. Dan Nerad; Asst. Supt. Erik Kass; and Director of Budget, Planning and Accounting Donna Williams) for making sure that my questions were answered over the weekend.

It is also worth noting that the local news coverage continues to be dismal. The only recent story I can find is this report from WISC-TV.

All budgeting involves looking at what has happened in the past, trying to take care of present needs and desires, and preparing for the future.  The desired outcomes for the school district should be (in order) providing quality and equitable education in the year being budgeted, preparing as much as possible to continue providing quality and equitable education in the future, and keeping those taxes you are responsible for (property taxes) as reasonable as possible.  These are interrelated and arriving at a balance requires taking a long view.

As long as the state school funding is insufficient and uncertain,  it will be  impossible to do any of these — much less all three — as well as the Board of Education would like to.   My initial thoughts on the scenarios the Board will be considering Monday are that the  present educational and tax related needs and desires have been reasonably well met but there has been little public consideration of the longer view — both past and future — and that the future might be more uncertain than it could be.

My concerns about the future and the past are linked by the biggest shock of the budget documents: $12.5 million was added to the Fund Balance equity in the 2008-09 fiscal year, increasing the equity by about 1/3 to $41.4 million (pp, 27-8 of the pdf).  This comes after a $6.1 million increase in the combined Fund Balances in 2007-8.  The (general) Fund 10  increase in 2008-9 was $11.2 Million (with some reserved for carried over expenses, I think).  In terms of the past, parts of the May Preliminary Budget and of the October Amended Budget address some of the causes of this under spending (or over budgeting), but I’m not sure they go far enough (I’m not sure they don’t either…more below).  In terms of both the present and the future, this level of equity opens up possibilities that I don’t think have been fully explored or exploited in the choices before the board.

Before going into more depth I want to say a couple of kind of philosophical things about how I approach this.

I’m a tax and spend person.  That means that what is taxed should be spent.  It bugs me when money is collected for something I believe in — like public education — and it is not spent.  This is money that could have done much good in improving education in Madison, instead it collects interest.  In Fund 10 alone we are talking about over $15 million in two years!  I recognize that a healthy Fund Balance has some benefits, particularly in terms of bond rating, borrowing costs and limiting the need for short term borrowing; but I also know that in April of 20o7  — a time when the Fund Balances had been shrinking and were about half of what they are now —  MMSD was given a AAA rating and that a Fund Balance which is large enough to eliminate the need for borrowing is too big.  I don’t think there are any simple rules for deciding how big is too big and how small is too small, but I’d welcome a chance to learn more.

That is one reason I also believe that extensive, fully informed discussions of Fund Balances should be part of the budget process.  This really hasn’t happened in MMSD lately.  The last extensive discussion was in April of 2007 when  ill-informed and over zealous conservatism swung the pendulum too far, which played  a big part in that $15 million in education funding going unspent (more on this in here).  At that time what discussion there was concerned keeping the Fund Balances from shrinking further; there was no deliberate or deliberated decision to grow the Fund Balances (that was the year schools almost closed, local class size reduction was slashed, class and a half special were instituted, special education was restructured for savings…).

Note that there is a different but not contradictory version of this history from the administration on page 27 here.

Since then, there hasn’t been much discussion at all.  As the preliminary budget was passed this May there was no documentation or public discussion of anticipated 2008-9 Fund Balances or surpluses, despite a statutory requirement that the Budget released prior to the mandated Budget Hearing “shall also show for informational purposes by fund all anticipated unexpended or unappropriated balances, and surpluses.”  I understand that in May you are going to be working with rough estimates, but that is better than total ignorance and no discussion at all.  The first public information I heard was a passing mention in August that it looked to be in the $7 to $8 million range.

Now we have hard numbers.  Now they have a chance to include this information in the budgeting, now it is possible to make  deliberate and informed strategic decisions about what the Fund Balance practices should be, about how to use the past as a guide for the present and for the future.  I really hope that happens on Monday (and if not Monday, sometime very soon).  This is part of avoiding future shocks.

Most of the rest of what I have to say is in the spirit of avoiding future shocks.  As I write this I am thinking of something then Superintendent Art Rainwater said at the time the district budgeting was moving in a conservative direction.  He felt he had to defend the aggressive budgeting that had resulted in consecutive years of the fund balance shrinking.  He said some things along the lines of what I had to say about taxing and spending above.  He also said (paraphrasing) the he didn’t believe that the insanity of Wisconsin’s school funding system would go on as long as it had and the promise of better budgets in the near future had contributed to the aggressive budgeting.  Art was wrong; getting the state elected officials to recognize the insanity  and act to bring sanity to school funding has proved to be  a more lengthy and difficult process than he imagined.

You have to be careful what you push to future budgets and tax levies; how the Fund Balances are treated could be a big part of this.

There will be at least some discussion of some Fund Balances at the meeting, because the May preliminary Budget,  Budget Amendments and Levy Adoption and the Budget Options to Reduce the Property Tax Levy documents all involve extensive use of the Fund 80 (Community Services, mostly MSCR and outside the Revenue Caps) Fund Balances and some use of the balances from other funds, including Fund 10 (the general fund).

The presentation of what is on the table Monday is somewhat confusing.  There is the Budget Amendments and Levy Adoption along with an Overview and there is there is the Budget Options to Reduce the Property Tax Levy, with an Overview.  Although the documents clearly state that nothing has been decided, this division creates the impression that Budget Amendments are rather set and that the only options are the “Options.”   All these are interrelated and I think good governance would be served by highlighting the choices being made in the manner that the Options are highlighted.

Most years this isn’t a big deal, but this isn’t most years.  As Supt. Nerad wrote:

On May 6,2009 the Board of Education was presented a proposed budget, approved amendments and adopted the 2009-10 budget. At that time the budget was built on our best assumptions known to us in the spring. Since the approval in spring factors have been finalized which we can know recalculate into our budget. These factors include finalizing salary and fringe budgets, a decrease in the Equalization Aid by 15%, a decrease in the Per Pupil increase on the Revenue Limit from $275 to $200, change in our Open Enrollment Out and In, Refinancing of Debt, savings on Short-Term Borrowing Interest, a decrease in Interest Earnings and increase in student enrollment.

The district has also received numerous grants, donations, and spending authority approval by the Board of Education since May.

There is just a lot more to be “fixed” than usual.

As I said above, some of the factors contributing to the unprecedented growth in the fund balance have been addressed and I believe that future budgeting will be more accurate.  These include the reductions in unallocated positions in elementary and secondary education done in the May budget and the proposal to lower the substitute and secondary teacher allocations that is part of the amendments being considered Monday.  These seem like sound budgeting.

Because of the timing of the budgets, other than these there are few direct “cuts” since the May budget.  By-the-way the new MTI contract seems have been largely anticipated and doesn’t appear to be responsible for any big changes either.  No future shocks there.

The biggest change (other than those related to reductions in anticipated revenue due to the  the state budget and the addition of targeted ARRA funding) is in the refinancing and rescheduling of debt.  The terms of this are already in place.  It was done to realize real long-term savings and to provide property tax relief in 2009-10 by reducing the debt service levy by almost $6.8 million.  If I read the document correctly, the real savings are $925,000 (maybe minus origination fees).  This means that almost $6 million in debt has been shifted to later years.  See this graph and part of a chart from the document.

debt chartThis is a case of the present desire/need to reduce property taxes being met at the cost of future budgets.

Decisions involving Fund Balances also weigh the present against the future.  The biggest move in the main amendments involves returning to the Partnership Plan idea of using almost $2 million of the Fund 80  balance to provide property tax relief.  At over $3 million, or about 1/4 of that total budget, the Fund 80 Balance is too high by most measures, this seems like a good idea.

If all of the initial amendments are enacted, the mil rate will be 10.40 an increase of .59 from 2008-9, translating into about $147 for a $250,000 home.  That’s a lot.

I can see why the Board wishes to explore options to further reduce the levy.  I hope as they do so they consider how these decisions may impact the years to come.

Past budgeting is ample evidence that you never know what the future will bring, but the last projections I’ve seen for 2010-11 were, in Erik Kass’s phrase, “ugly.”

How ugly? I’m guessing an budget gap between allowed revenues and cost-to-continue in the range of $3 to 6 million and the most recent projected mil rate was 10.91.  Big cuts and another big property tax raise spells trouble.  Beyond 2010-11 depends on state action (actually, if the WAES Pennies for Kids proposal is enacted, 2010-11 could be OK, state action again).

I think 2010-11 and beyond  need to be kept in mind as the Board considers options to further reduce the 2009-10 levy by eliminating transfers, contingency funds, the rest of the 2008-9 debt levy; deferring making up the taxes for the Walgreen’s reassessment and (this is the big one) forgoing collecting the maintenance referendum levy and the most of the maintenance that would fund.  Most of these involve pushing expenses to the future.  I’m skeptical about the wisdom of these options.

As I said above, the size of the Fund Balances offers some opportunities.  Of all the further options the one I like least is deferred maintenance, but I could support forgoing the levy if the projects were done using Fund Balance money and this decision was made as part of a longer term fiscal plan.

The Board should set some parameters for the proper size and uses of Fund Balance money.  They should at least be discussing if it is better to use that money now for property tax relief, reserve it to avoid future cuts and mitigate future taxes, designate it for special circumstances like Four-Year-Old Kindergarten start up costs, or leave it alone to keep the bond rating strong and the borrowing minimal.

As some of what is posted above indicates, I have opinions of much of this, but mostly I want conscious, informed, considered, public decisions to be made.  You can’t avoid all future shocks, but you can try.

[Note, this post is late, a bit incoherent and somewhat incomplete because a computer error led to much of a near final draft being lost.]

Thomas J. Mertz

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West Bend School Budget Protest, “”Go ahead: Raise my taxes” and More

Vodpod videos no longer available.Video from WITI -Fox 6

You got to love it, students in conservative West Bend out marching against school budget cuts.  These kids are great; watch the video!

This is just one of many good things being done and said as that community deals with the impact of 15 years under a state school funding system designed to fail, capped off by a state budget that seems to have accelerating that failure as a goal.  The situation might be desperate, but the need for comprehensive reform message is making some progress.  The pieces are all there, all that is missing is directing the anger and frustration at the correct target — our state elected officials.

In September the estimates were that the revenue limit for West Bend would allow for a 12.1% property tax increase to partially make up for$2,4 million of cuts in state aid.  Over 700 people attended the annual meeting a week earlier (video at the link) —   the teabaggers were out again.

Local blogger Kristina had a great response, here is part of it.

To all the proud, No voters at the last school board meeting. How proud you must be. No band or orchestra in 6th grade, no band lessons in high school, higher athletic fees, loss of teachers and aides, cutting librarians, program support teachers, gifted and talented teacher cuts at all levels, increase in class sizes 35 – 40 and mandatory one additional class to be taught, getting rid of 1 east and west teacher and replace them with an aide. Wait let’s not forget counseling services, school social workers, athletic directors, dean of students at McLane, possibly eliminating a principal position at elementary level, all gone without a tax levy.

Hang on there’s more beautiful things the no’s I am sure are proud to stand behind. The elimination of business and technology departments and all classes go too. Middle school exploratories, world culture and tech ed. Elementary fitness, which the no’s can scream about childhood obesity and laziness of our youth but still use TV and video games as babysitters. Makes sense right? Sure, sarcasm was needed there….

Stop thinking about this as what this levy would do to you, and ask yourself what it would do to all the kids. Is $100.00 bucks or so a year worth under educating them? No! Take the 10 bucks a month you spend on fast food, coffee, case of soda, or something and set it aside at the end of the year you will be up $200.00 bucks.

The district did not set out secretly planning ways to ‘get’ the taxpayers. The district was put in this mess by the state cutting their funds without telling them before this year’s budget had to be completed. Pat Herdrich or any other school official is not trying to screw anyone or squeeze more money out of people to spend on extra candy vending machines or so the admin and teachers can give themselves all raises and fly to Europe for fun. They are asking for it so classes are not cut, teachers let go, and in the end, the students are the ones left with the consequences. This is defiantly a NEED not a WANT.

At an October 5th workshop meeting,  the Board approved $300,000 in cuts, which along with some new numbers from the state brought the proposed levy increase down to 9% with a mil rate of 7.44.

Some good community education happened at this meeting.

At least a couple residents looking on changed their views, saying no cuts were needed, after hearing the history, state limitations and politics involved.

“I changed my mind,” said Doug Rakowski at the end of the nearly 4-hour session that was closed to public comments. “I will get up at the next meeting and support this.”

He cited the state budget conditions that are expected to negatively affect the West Bend district in the future.

And from a later story:

To keep previous budgets in check during a time of state revenue caps, the district has made cuts for the past 15 years, often in areas such as maintenance and supplies, administrators say. Consequently, salaries have taken up a larger percentage of the budget.

With state aid projected to tighten in the next three years, the focus for the next round of cuts will be on programs and staff..

The top five prioritized cuts for 2010-2011: $300,000 in athletics by having one high school, $134,000 by closing the pool, $206,000 by eliminating 2.8 social workers, $50,000 by eliminating three elementary head custodians and $75,000 by reclassifying custodians.

The biggest cuts appear to off the table for now, but  like many other districts, 2010-11 is looking worse:

[West Bend School District Superintendent Pat] Herdrich said that the state aid formula and biennial budget that favors high-spending districts will have West Bend, with the lowest levy rate in Southeastern Wisconsin, facing double-digit increases in 2010-11. If the district is not near its revenue cap this year, it might face a 17 percent increase next year to maintain current programs, she said.

“How deep do you want the cuts to be next year?” she asked the seven board members. “Where you leave off is where you start for next year.”

The October 12 meeting also brought out the students in the video at the top and other school supporters, quoted in this report from TMJ4 – Milwaukee as saying “Go ahead: Raise my taxes.”

A Support West Bend Schools group is now active.

More new numbers from the state all but eliminated the progress toward a lower limit made at the October 6 meeting.

Now it appears the choices on Monday, October 26 final Budget and Levy meeting will range between a 9.0% increase and a 10.9% levy increases.  The 10.9 increase is the maximum allowed based on the final revenue limit calculations from the state.

Like many districts around Wisconsin, West Bend may not be taxing to the max this year.

A 9% increase would now mean $586,523 in new cuts.  The administration is recommending a 10.9% increase and a 7.47 mil rate.

The meeting has been moved to the Field House, which seats 3,400 and 90 minutes has been set aside for public testimony.  It should be an interesting meeting.

That’s great for those of us who study school politics and/or consider them a spectator sport.  It isn’t great for the community, the School Board or the students.

It is clear from what is happening in West Bend and elsewhere that comprehensive reform and balanced, sustainable revenues are needed.  The Wisconsin Alliance for Excellent Schools proposal for a Pennies for Kids small sales tax dedicated to education would get us out this revenue crisis and make reforms — such as those of the School Finance Network possible.

If the people of West Bend don’t want to go through this next year and the year after (and the year after…), they getting involved in these campaigns and work to convince their legislators that this can and must be done.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under "education finance", Budget, education, finance, Local News, Pennies for Kids, School Finance, Take Action, Uncategorized

Who are they kidding? “State Representatives Strive To Continue Wisconsin’s Legacy of Education”

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Video  and story from WSAW (sorry about the advertisement)

There has been a lot of hot air, half truths, spin and misinformation about education funding in the 2009-11 Wisconsin biennial budget, but this story from Wausau takes the prize (for a recent, local entry in this sweepstakes of dishonor, see this column by Madison Rep. Mark Pocan, page 16 of the pdf).  Democratic Rep.  Thomas Nelson and Republican Rep. Jerry Petrowski claim in this report that their parties are constant champions of education who have placed educational excellence on the Fall legislative agenda.

The editing by the reporter may have  skewed things, Nelson and Petrowski may be capable legislators; I really don’t know.  What I do know is that what appeared in this story needs some critical attention.

Time for some fact checking.

So far the only Republican initiative of note is a proposal from Sen. Alberta Darling and Rep.  Brett Davis on “merit pay” for teachers.  Right now the proposal is nothing but a press release.  It is worth noting that previous school reform plans (and here) by Brett Davis never made it past the press release stage.

The announced Democratic Fall agenda is silent on education; Governor Jim Doyle has some ideas, but not much to say about funding these ideas or even the quality of education that Wisconsin has boasted of in the recent past.

Nelson  touts tripling sparsity aid to some rural districts.  What isn’t mentioned is that the resulting $11.18 million for the biennium is a drop in the bucket and doesn’t come near to addressing the unique diseconomies of scale of Wisconsin’s “small but necessary” districts.  Nelson also doesn’t acknowledge that this increase in a categorical aid was accompanied by a much larger decrease in general aids resulting in a substantial  net loss for all (or almost all?) districts receiving sparsity payments (to get the picture compare this list of sparsity distribution estimates with this list of general aid estimates for all districts, or just read this wonderful editorial from Frank Murphy in Florence).  I’m all for an increase in sparsity aid, but that alone does not make for  adequate school funding.

Petrowski is correct when he said “In the last budget that Democrats passed, was a cut for local school districts… and I’m afraid these cuts will affect [property] tax payers.”  What he doesn’t say is that the GOP stance throughout the budget process was to claim taxes and spending were too high and that at no point did the Republicans attempt to increase state education funding.

Enough of the back-and-forth, the real howler is in the closing lines of the story:

But at the end of the day no matter what side of the isle [sic] State Representatives are on..

“Democrats and Republicans in good economic times and tough economic times have always made the consistent decision to fully fund our schools,” says Representative Nelson.

Amazing…after 16 years under our current school finance system, after a Governor’s Task Force, a Special Joint Committee, an independent task force, proposals from Republicans Democrats and advocacy organizations (and here) all agreeing that school finance is broken and needs to be fixed; after a biennial budget that cut state education investments by $535 million, increased the school levy credits — money that never goes near a classroom, but is counted by Wisconsin as “State Aid — by $352,852,200, a 26% increase bringing the total to $1,697,625,200 for the biennium… Nelson asserts a long term bi-partisan consensus for full funding of education.   Who is he kidding?  Who are they all kidding?

For a refreshing (and depressing) dose of  truth see this recent Milwaukee Journal Sentinel story: “”State aid drops to many school districts” (or just click around in the AMPS archives).

Thomas J. Mertz

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Filed under "education finance", Budget, education, finance, Gimme Some Truth, Local News, School Finance, Uncategorized

Education: Dressed & Ready for Stimulation

Photograph by David Wahl

Photograph by David Wahl

The National Access Network has highlighted the U.S. Department of Educations (USDOE) Office of the Inspector General’s report that has raised concerns over states’ use of stimulus funds.

The American Renewal and Recovery Act (ARRA) statute requires states to provide several assurances, including commitments to fund K-12 and higher education at least at FY 2006 levels and to promote reform in four areas, in order to receive these monies. The report noted however, that several states have capitalized on the flexibility of the funding requirements, to use stimulus funds to supplant rather than supplement education budgets. On AMPS we have highlighted this same issue for Wisconsin on a number of occasions, see here and here.

The department’s report contended that it has made an effort to close some funding loopholes by including funding maintenance as a consideration for awarding the so-called “Race to the Top” funds.

Equity advocates, however, have argued that this provision does not do enough, as the guidelines focus on proportional levels of funding rather than absolute figures. That is, the regulations leave the door open for states to cut the total budget from year-to-year and remain competitive applicants.

As the Access Network has noted:

The information the states have submitted raises serious questions about whether the stated purposes of the Act – stabilizing education funding, facilitating the continuation of equity and adequacy formula adjustments and promoting education reforms to boost student achievement – are being met. The goal of boosting student achievement is to be promoted through commitments from each state to promote four essential areas of reform: 1) improving teacher effectiveness; 2) making progress toward college and career-ready standards and rigorous assessments; 3) enhancing data systems to track educational practice; and 4) improving achievement in low-performing schools.

Only the first of these three goals appears to have been achieved. Virtually all of the states have stabilized their funding levels for FY 2010 at the previous years level, with the application of the federal stimulus funds. (In many instances, however, this flat funding will nevertheless result in substantial cuts in educational services since mandatory cost increases will not be covered.)

In the vastly underfunded state education systems throughout the country, stabilizing funding levels may have been

unduly emphasized at the expense of the equity and reform goals of the ARRA, as some states apparently increased their anticipated education deficits upon learning that substantial federal funding for education was in the offing, in order to limit planned cuts in other areas of the budget. Although some officials might argue that such maneuvers represented prudent budget planning, from the perspective the intent of the ARRA and the constitutional pre-eminence given to education in most state constitutions, such maneuvers clearly raise serious legal issues.

A number of advocates for educational equity have called on the DOE to require states to fund low performing schools at adequate levels. The way the current regulations are drafted, only one provision has a focus on this kind of funding. The Campaign for Educational Equity for example, has proposed a requirement that states need to provide data that shows to what extent the proportion of each state’s budget devoted to education for FY 2009 either increased, decreased or remained the same compared to FY 2008. The assumption is that those states who have maintained or increased educational funding during the last fiscal year would receive some favorable consideration in the review process for doing so. But additionally, the campaign has argued that any reform conditions that seek to assist struggling schools should include specifically the various resources identified through adequacy case law that are deemed necessary comprehensive services for students from poverty backgrounds. Further, they’ve advocated for the DOE to require states to increase their total and per pupil state and local revenues that meet the average levels of all states, or if the state is more affluent, then maintain their current funding levels. That requirement would also include states having to allocate higher levels of funding to school districts with higher levels of poverty. The DOE is meant to issue final guidelines quite shortly and grant applications will then be due and phase 1 monies will be distrubuted in early 2010.

Exactly where Wisconsin is on the supplanting vs. supplementing continuum remains to be seen. A report card from this July of each state can be found here. We’ll keep you posted.

Robert Godfrey

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Filed under "education finance", Accountability, AMPS, Arne Duncan, Best Practices, Budget, Equity, finance, National News, School Finance, We Are Not Alone

Gerald Bracey Will be Missed

Sad news for anyone concerned with honesty and accuracy in education research and reporting, Jerry Bracey has died unexpectedly.

No news reports, but did get a confirmation from Susan Ohanian.

Jerry fought the good fight, with the Education Disinformation Detection and Reporting Agency (EDDRA), on the Huffington Post, in books, articles, columns, calls and notes to editors and reporters, anywhere and anytime that education research was being misused and abused or was simply badly done.

I never met Jerry, but I’ve been a participant in his EDDRA Yahoo Group and have exchanged private messages.  He was combative, friendly and good humored, with a passion for truth and the power of knowledge and education.

One thing that always impressed me was the depth and breadth of his knowledge.   He could always call up and cite relevant reports and articles, new and old,  with apparent ease.  That can’t be replaced.

He will be missed.

Some links to other blogs noting this loss.

DairyStateDad.

EdWonk.

Mike Klonsky’s Small Talk.

Education Notes OnLine.

Giving Jerry the last word (he always seemed to want it), his Nine Myths About Public Schools.

Nine Myths About Public Schools

None of this will likely strike you as particularly new, but it might be good to have a bunch of myths lined up and debunked all in one place.

  1. The schools were to blame for letting the Russians get into space first. Granddaddy of all slanders and a great illustration of the absolute nuttiness with which people talk about education.
    Sputnik, the first man-made satellite to orbit the earth, launched on October 4, 1957. On September 20, 1956, Werner von Braun’s Army Ballistic Missile Agency launched a 4-stage Jupiter C rocket from Cape Canaveral. After the first 3 stages fired, the rocket was 832 miles in the air and traveling at 13,000 miles an hour. The 4th stage could have easily bumped something into orbit. The 4th stage was filled with sand. There were a number of reasons for this including the fact that the Eisenhower administration was determined to keep its weapons rocket program and its space exploration project separate and von Braun’s rocket was clearly a weapon. Its primary intent was to incinerate Russian cities with nuclear warheads. Ike worried how the Russians might react. His Assistant Defense Secretary Donald Quarles actually said “the Russians did us a favor” because they established the precedent that deep space was free and international.Most US engineers in the space program in 1957 would have graduated high school in the 1930s, but in the media, the schools of the 1950s took the hit for Sputnik. Ike was quite puzzled by this.
  2. Schools alone can close the achievement gap. This is codified in the disaster known as No Child Left Behind. Most of the differences come from family and community variables and many out-of-school factors, especially summer loss. Some studies have found that poor children enter school behind their middle class peers, learn as much during the year and then lose it over the summer. They fall farther and farther behind and schools are blamed. Middle class and affluent kids do not show summer loss.
  3. Money doesn’t matter. Tell this to wealthy districts. Money clearly affects changes in achievement although levels of achievement are more influenced by the variables just mentioned. Most studies are short term and look only at test scores, a very foolish mistake. Economists David Card and Alan Krueger also found investments in school show a payoff in terms of long-term earnings of graduates.
  4. The United States is losing its competitive edge. China and India ARE Rising. As economies collapsed all around it, China’s economy grew a remarkable 7% last year. On just humanitarian grounds, we should not wish China and India to remain poor forever, but the more they grow the more money they have to buy stuff from us. As China and India prosper, we prosper. The World Economic Forum and the Institute for Management Development have consistently ranked the U. S. economy as the most competitive in the world. Education is only one part of multi-factor systems in rankings. WEF is especially keen on innovation. Our obsession with testing makes testing a great instrument for destroying creativity.
  5. The U. S. has a shortage of scientists, mathematicians and engineers. This was a myth started oddly enough by the National Science Foundation in the 1980s in a study with assumptions so absurd the study was never published, but the myth lingers on. In fact, Hal Salzman of the Urban Institute and Lindsay Lowell of Georgetown University found that we have three newly minted scientists and engineers who are permanent residents or native citizens for every newly minted job. Within 2 years, 65% of them were no longer in scientific or engineering fields. That proportion might have fallen during the current debacle when people are more likely to hang on to a job even if they hate it. An article in the September 18 Wall Street Journal reported that before the economy collapsed, 30% of the graduates of MIT–MIT–headed directly into finance.
  6. Merit pay for teachers will improve performance. Bebchuk & Fried Pay Without Performance. Adams, Heywood & Rothstein, Teachers, Performance Pay, and Accountability. Bonus pay is concentrated in finance, insurance, and real estate. In most of private sector hard to determine and often leads to corruption and gaming the system. Campbell’s Law: “The more any quantitative social indicator is used for social decision making, the more subject it will be to corruption pressures and the more apt it will be to distort the social processes it is intended to monitor.”
  7. The fastest growing jobs are all high-tech and require postsecondary education. “Postsecondary education” is a weasel word. A majority of the fastest growing jobs do, in fact, require some kind of postsecondary training. But, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, they account for very few jobs. It’s the Walmarts and Macdonald’s of America that generate the jobs. According to the BLS, the job of retail sales accounts for more jobs than the top ten fastest growing jobs combined.
  8. Test scores are related to economic competitiveness. We do well on international comparisons of reading, pretty good on one international comparison of math and science, and not so good on another math/science comparison. But these comparisons are based on the countries’ average scores and average scores don’t mean much. The Organization for Economic Cooperating and Development, the producer of the math science comparison in which we do worst has pointed out that in science the U. S. has 25% of all the highest scoring students in the entire world, at least the world as defined by the 60 countries that participate in the tests. Finland might have the highest scores, but that only gives them 2,000 warm bodies compared to the U. S. figure of 67,000. It’s the high scorers who are most likely to become leaders and innovators. Only four nations have a higher proportion of researchers per 1000 fulltime employees, Sweden, Finland, New Zealand and Japan. Only Finland is much above the U. S.  Consider Japan, the economic juggernaut of the 1980’s. It kids score well on tests and people made a causal link between scores and Japan’s economy. But Japan’s economy has been in the doldrums for almost a whole generation. Its kids still ace tests.
  9. Education itself produces jobs. President Obama and Secretary of Education Duncan have both linked any economic recovery to school improvement. This is nonsense. There are parts of India where thousands of educated people compete for a single relatively low-level white-collar job. Some of you might recall that in the 1970’s many sociologists and commentators worried that America was becoming TOO educated, that they would be bored by the work available

Thomas J. Mertz

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