Montana Fact Sheet Related
News
State Funding Context
Fom NCES (most current available statistics):
Pre-K
to 12 Students, 2005-06: 145,416
Annual
Public School Expenditures, 2004-2005: $1.18
Billion
%
Eligible for Free/Reduced Lunch, 2005-06: 34.5
%
in limited-English-proficiency programs, 2005-06:
4.6
| Study Title: |
"Estimating
the Cost of an Adequate Education in Montana” |
| Date Completed: |
January 2007
|
| Definition of Adequacy: |
“Sufficient funding so that schools and
districts have a reasonable chance to meet state
and federal student performance expectations.”
- Performance expectations include:
- State statutes
- The state education accountability system
- Compliance with NCLB, including 100 percent
of students meeting reading and math proficiency
targets by 2014
Editorial comment: Achieving 100 percent
proficiency is an unprecedented and, experts argue,
unattainable goal. Robert Linn, co-director of
the National Center for Research on Evaluation,
Standards, and Student Testing, calls the 100%
proficiency standard “unrealistically high.”
Adequacy definition also includes legislature’s
2005 definition of a “basic system of free
quality public elementary and secondary schools,”
which includes a list of educational inputs, e.g.
minimum standards, qualified teachers, programs
for students with special needs, appropriate facilities
and school technology, among others.
|
| Per Pupil Costs: |
Per Pupil Costs
Base costs (for students without special needs):
Small districts (<501 students): $11,682
Moderate districts (501-1200 students): $9,459
Large districts (1,201 - 3000 students) : $9,028
Very large districts (>3000 students): $9,030
Special needs weightings:
- 0.77, 1.32, and 2.93 for students with mild,
moderate, and severe disabilities
- A logarithmic formula for at-risk students
(see p. 57) based on enrollment that results
in weightings mostly between 0.25 and 0.50
- A logarithmic formula for ELL students (see
p. 58) based on enrollment that results in weightings
mostly between 0.50 and 0.80
K-12 school systems:
An average of $12,646 per pupil
K-8 school systems:
An average of $13,159 per pupil
|
| Calculated Additional Costs: |
K-12
school systems: $624 million (61 percent)
K-8
school systems: $101 million (91 percent)
Total:
$725 million (64 percent)
|
| Major Recommendations: |
Major recommendations from the Professional Judgment
panels:
- Smaller classes sizes
- Increased preschool availability
- Full-day kindergarten
- Before-, after-, and summer school programs
to help struggling students
- Additional teachers and support staff for
ELL and at-risk students
- Increased professional development for teachers,
including on-site instructional facilitators
to work with teachers.
The authors found that “Montana falls behind
almost all nearby states in terms of compensating
its teachers…. Left unchecked, this problem
will over time cause recruitment and retention
problems.” Authors noted that this was true
in many industries in Montana. Authors recommended
across-the-board 6.1% salary increase for all
personnel and included that in the calculated
costs.
|
| Implementation: |
In May 2007, the state Legislature passed a
school funding bill that increased funding by
$140 million over two years, including significant
funding to increase teacher salaries, plus a $10
million one-time appropriation to allow districts
to start all-day kindergarten programs. |
| Methodology: |
Professional
Judgment/Evidence-based:
Authors convened 9 panels, each with 6-10 participants,
for a total of 69 panelists. All panelists were
“experienced” educators from districts
meeting 2005-2006 performance standards to the
extent possible, including as many educators as
possible who had received recognition for professional
excellence.
- Four panels identified school-level resource
needs for students without special needs
- Two special needs panels identified the needs
of special needs students (one for small districts
and one for large districts)
- Two panels added district-level resource needs
- A statewide overview panel reviewed the work
of previous panels to resolve inconsistencies
and provide input regarding salary comparisons
with other states
Authors created hypothetical model schools and
districts in four different sizes, the same models
used in Montana’s 2002 study. Percentages
of special education and English Learner students
were constant across the models, while the percentage
of students eligible for free or reduced-price
lunches (“at-risk students”) varied
to reflect actual variations across districts
of varying size.
Authors developed and gave panelists starting
figures for school-level staffing needs for teachers,
principals, instructional leaders, and teacher
tutors, based on evidence-based analyses, and
evidence-based recommendations of technology needs.
.
Authors used the professional judgment data to
extrapolate “weightings” for students
with special needs.
Successful
School Districts:
The authors chose not to present a full Successful
School District analysis, because only two years
of data were available. The authors used three
standards:
(1) “On pace” to meet 2013-2014
goal of 100% proficiency
(2) “On pace” to meet 2009-2010
goal of 80% proficiency in reading and 73% proficiency
in math.
(3) Already meeting the 2009-2010 goals.
Authors note that “only a handful of
systems met this [last] target. The number was
so low that APA believes the results, if presented,
would be spurious and misleading.”
|
| Special Features of the Study: |
Preschool
is included in the study
This
study did not consider capital funding for facilities,
etc., transportation, food service, adult education,
or community service costs, which are ordinarily
excluded from adequacy studies.
|
| Public Input: |
None |
| Prepared for: |
The Montana
Quality Education Coalition, a non-profit
organization comprised of school districts and
state education organizations |
| Prepared by: |
Augenblick, Palaich and Associates, Inc. |
Fact Sheet prepared July 2007
|