Number
of Costing-Out Studies Will Continue to Grow in 2004 School funding costing-out
studies were conducted at an unprecedented rate during 2003. Final reports
were released in Arkansas,
Missouri, Washington,
Kentucky, Massachusetts,
and North Dakota, and 2004
is expected to yield at least as many studies. Currently, 34
studies have been completed or are in the midst of the research process. Although
some costing-out studies are court-mandated, such as in New
York and Arkansas, other studies
have been initiated by state governments or independent education advocacy
organizations. Researchers from the National
Conference of State Legislatures expect to release the results of costing-out
studies performed in Vermont and Arizona.
The Vermont costing-out study, which utilizes both the professional judgment and
successful schools methodologies,
was initiated by the Vermont
Department of Education in accordance with a new
state statute. A court-mandated costing-out study measuring the cost of educating
English Language Learners (ELL) in Arizona
will use a similar combined methodology. The Minnesota
Governor's Task Force on Education Finance Reform is working with researchers
to complete a costing-out study in that state. Professional judgment panels have
reported to the task force and a final report is expected in early 2004. The
New York Adequacy Study, initiated by the Campaign
for Fiscal Equity, Inc. and the New
York State School Boards Association, will be released in February 2004. This
research project was started before the New York Court of Appeals decision
in June 2003 that ordered the completion of a costing-out study as part of its
remedy. Researchers from Management
and Analysis Planning, Inc. (MAP) and the American
Institutes for Research (AIR) have collaborated on this costing-out study.
This study incorporates both the professional judgment and successful schools
methodology and contains an extensive and unprecedented public engagement component.
Researchers and other speakers will highlight the methodology used in the New
York study, present alternative methods for costing out an adequate education,
and discuss the legal and political context of "adequacy" during
a workshop preceding the annual American
Education Finance Association (AEFA) Conference on March 11, 2004 in Salt
Lake City. Texas, Hawaii
and other states have also commissioned costing-out studies that will likely be
released in 2004. The California
Quality
Education Model (QEM) Commission will develop "educational components, educational
resources, and corresponding costs" necessary "so that the vast majority of pupils
can meet [state] academic performance standards," as required by state law. Although
the commission was scheduled to release its report in 2004, the new governor is
reappointing members and completion of the model is not expected until 2005. The
increased financial burden that the No Child
Left Behind Act places on school districts has caused many recent costing-out
studies to consider the costs of implementation of the federal mandate. Many studies
claim to directly account for the requirements of NCLB, yet further research is
currently underway to determine additional funds needed to satisfy the many provisions
of the federal law. Prepared January 14, 2004
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