North
Carolina School Funding, Accountability, and Student Achievement Gains
Power Point Presentation
by John Poteat Director of Research Public School Forum of North Carolina
On February 6, 2004, at the fourth annual Education Adequacy conference
in Alexandria, Virginia, John Poteat, Director of Research, Public
School Forum of North Carolina, provided an informative presentation on North
Carolina's school funding system and its accountability system and, also, briefly
compared certain aspects of the accountability system with the NCLB approach.
We asked John to speak, at least in part, because North
Carolina has been a leader in education reform and improved student achievement
for the last decade or so. Advocates in other states who want to bring about similar
reforms will do well to look carefully at North Carolina to help inform their
efforts. John's remarks and accompanying power point slides were particularly
helpful because he first discussed the recent history and context of school funding
and accountability reform in North Carolina. The two-day conference, Education
Adequacy: Strategies for Achieving Reform in Difficult Times, was co-sponsored
by ACCESS (part of the Campaign
for Fiscal Equity, Inc.) and by the National
School Boards Association and included panel presentations and discussions
on such critical education issues as:
Costing Out an Adequate Education
Building Coalitions: Reaching out to the Faith Community, School Board Associations,
and Urban/Rural Constituencies
Developing Accountability Systems for Education Adequacy
Advocacy Strategies: Reports from the Field, and
Litigation Strategies.
Prepared March 19, 2004 by
Molly A. Hunter
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