| Study Title: |
"Resource
Adequacy Study for the New York State
Commission on Education Reform" |
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| Date Completed: |
March 2004 |
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Align additional resources with
high-need students and create incentives and policies
for people to rise to the challenge of meeting the
needs of students who are most at risk. |
| Calculated Base Costs: |
Between $2.5 billion and $5.6 billion additional
funding in 2004 dollars, based on the "cost
efficient" school districts identified as "successful."
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At least 75% and as much as 88% of the increased
funding should go to New York City schools. As reported
in the New
York Times, "This is what you would
get if you just focused on student need and leave
the politics aside,' said William J. Cox, a managing
director at S&P. It is a significant contrast
to current practice.'" (Greg Winter, State
Commission Wants Billions to Help Schools, March
30, 2004, p A1) |
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This study used additional
weighting factors for "at-risk" students:
low-income, 35%; ELL, 20%; students with disabilities,
110% on average. No additional weighting is included
for concentrations of poverty. The authors point
out that these are averages drawn from the research
literature and may need to be adjusted by school
or district. |
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| Major Recommendations: |
Align resources with student need.
Target additional resources to teacher quality
and preschool programs.
Adopt a foundation-based approach.
Adjust resources for geographic cost differences.
No particular implementation period suggested.
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| Special Features of the Study: |
The scope of the Commission's request
to the S&P study team was to:
1) identify the spending levels in the better-performing
districts;
2) account for additional resources needed for
students with special needs;
3) consider regional cost differences; and
4) calculate equivalent funding levels by extrapolating
the data from better-performing districts.
Attempts to make transparent all of the important
assumptions in the study.
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| Implementation: |
Not yet implemented
This study formed part of the basis
for the Final Report from the "New
York State Commission on Education
Reform," appointed by Governor
Pataki. The Commission's recommendations
included funding increases between
$2.5 billion and $5.6 billion, a variety
of accountability measures, and a
five-year implementation period. It
did not include the S&P study's
recommendation that most of the increased
funding be directed to the districts
educating high-need children.
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| Methodology: |
Successful
School Districts |
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The study identified "successful districts,"
analyzed spending in those districts, translated
the spending into 2004 dollars, and calculated
spending gaps (that is the amount by which schools
are under-funded).
First, the study used four separate sets
of criteria from up to three years of data to
identify successful districts:
1) Top Performers: used the average
of 15 indicatorstest passing rates and
graduation and retention rates; chose districts
in top 25% of the states' districts IF they
were also above the state average on each indicator.
Identified 102 districts.
2) 2006 Achievement Targets: districts
that have already met the state's 2005-06 Performance
Index targets (six tests) under the federal
NCLB Act,
per the State Education Department (SED), and
have Regents Diploma rates and dropout rates
better than the state average. Identified 180
districts.
3) 2008 Achievement Targets:districts
that have already met the state's 2007-08 Performance
Index targets (six tests) under the federal
NCLB Act, per the SED, and have Regents Diploma
rates and dropout rates better than the state
average. Identified 108 districts.
4) Regents Criteria:districts where 80%
of test takers score Proficient or above in
grade 4 and where the simple average scores
on five Regents exams are each 65 or above.
Identified 281 districts.
Student demographics in the identified districts
vary markedly from state averages, that is, they
educate much lower percentages of low-income and
ELL students and somewhat lower percentages of
special education students.
Comment: This raises the question whether
using these districts to estimate costs for districts
with dramatically different student demographics
is reasonable or appropriate.
Forty-four (44) school districts were identified
as successful under all four scenarios.
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Next, the study looked at spending in
the identified districts and adjusted for geographic
cost differences, additional spending for students
with special needs and "cost effectiveness."
Because achievement in the "successful districts"
was similar for the top 50% of spenders and the
bottom 50%, the study eliminated the top 50% as
"inefficient" and used the average of
the bottom 50% to calculate the funding needed
in districts not identified as "successful."
Comment: This may skew the study's results
because the study did not determine whether the
"inefficient" label was accurate. Because
salaries and benefits are the bulk of school funding
(especially when facilities and transportation
are not included, as they are not in these studies)
and districts have minimal control over the seniority
of their employees, the higher spending districts
may simply have more experienced teachers and
staff relative to the lower spending districts.
Some other studies have used average spending
from "successful" districts after excluding
only the top and bottom 5% to eliminate outliers.
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Finally, the study translated the calculated
spending into 2004 dollars and computed the statewide
spending gaps, that is, the amount by which districts
are under-funded. Using the New York Regional
Cost Index, the statewide spending gap is from
$4.6 billion to $5.6 billion across the four scenarios.
The bottom end of the range dropped to $2.5 billion
when the study used the Geographic Cost of Education
Index.
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| Additional Factors: |
The "Resource Adequacy Study
for the New York State Commission on Education Reform"
was undertaken by Standard
& Poor's for the Governor's Commission on
Education Reform, formed in response to an Order
from the Court of Appeals (the state's highest court),
which required the state to "ascertain the
actual cost of providing a sound basic education,"
as part of the remedy in CFE v. State. It
was undertaken pro bono by Standard & Poor's
after the State Comptroller refused to approve a
proposed contract due to an alleged conflict of
interest. It was released March 29, 2004 along with
the Commission's report and recommendations. |
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| Public Input: |
None. The Commission on Education Reform, for
which the study was conducted, held public hearings.
But the cost-study team itself conducted no outreach
to stakeholders or the public.
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| Prepared for: |
New York State Commission on Education
Reform, appointed by Governor George Pataki in September
2003. |
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| Prepared by: |
Standard & Poor's (S&P, best
known for its credit rating services) |