The Riverside Press-Enterprise

More money isn’t key for our schools

- By Christian Barnard Christian Barnard is assistant director of education reform at Reason Foundation and co-author of the new study, “Public Education at a Crossroads: A Comprehens­ive Look at K-12 Resources and Outcomes for All 50 States.“

Public school advocacy groups often claim California’s public schools are underfunde­d. “California is the eighth largest economy in the world but continues to rank well below the national average in per-student funding,” says the California Teachers Associatio­n website.

In recent years, however, some of these accusation­s have softened because they are increasing­ly wrong or difficult to defend.

Compared to all 50 states, California has had the ninthfaste­st growth in education funding over the last two decades. It now ranks 17th in the nation in per-student spending, well above the national average. California’s students also made notable academic progress during this period.

While it’s easy to argue that large spending increases are the primary driver of student achievemen­t gains, the real explanatio­n is more complicate­d.

According to a new Reason Foundation study, California’s inflation-adjusted K-12 education funding grew from $12,471 per student in 2002 to $16,934 per student in 2020, a 35.8% growth rate that ranked ninth highest in the United States.

Over a similar period, California students made significan­t gains in math and reading scores on the National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress (NAEP), often called the Nation’s Report Card. From 2003 to 2019, the state’s 4thgrade NAEP reading scores increased by 11 points (+5.3%), ranking second in the country in growth rate. The state’s

4th-grade math scores rose by seven points (+3.2%), ranking 16th in improvemen­t during that time. California’s 8thgrade NAEP reading scores also increased by eight points (+3.1%), ranking first in the nation in growth, while its 8thgrade math scores grew by nine points (+3.2%), the eighthbest improvemen­t.

These results set California apart from other states that have seen little improvemen­t in student achievemen­t despite significan­t increases in education funding from 2002 to 2020. New York, which leads the nation in per-student funding and funding growth, saw almost no improvemen­t in NAEP scores and declined by three points in 4th-grade reading and 4 points in 8th-grade reading.

Washington, which grew education funding at a higher rate than California and

ranked fifth nationally in perstudent revenue growth, was largely stagnant on the NAEP from 2003 to 2019.

These other state case studies complicate the narrative that more education spending reliably boosts student achievemen­t. So, what else can help explain California’s progress?

Most notably, California has increased public school choice. It has one of the largest charter school sectors in the country, with over 1,300 charters serving 11.7% of the state’s public school population.

According to Stanford University’s Center for Research on Student Outcomes, students in California charters outperform similar students in traditiona­l public schools in reading and math. Since 2000, California’s charter school population has nearly quadrupled — meaning that charter growth has likely driven some of the gains in student achievemen­t over the period examined in Reason Foundation’s study.

Another possible driver of California’s NAEP gains is the state’s relatively streamline­d and flexible funding formula. Adopted in 2013, California’s Local Control Funding Formula emphasizes channeling greater resources toward higher-need students and allowing for local flexibilit­y. This contrasts with the more restrictiv­e and complex funding formulas of states like New York and Washington.

California’s NAEP results also shouldn’t be overstated.

Notwithsta­nding the strong growth, the state’s 4th- and 8th-grade students still rank within or near the bottom 10 states in all testing categories examined. Additional­ly, the state’s NAEP outcomes slipped after the COVID-19 pandemic — albeit less so than most other states — and achievemen­t gaps based on race and income have widened since the onset of the pandemic.

For California’s students to recover and continue making progress, state leaders need to go deeper than calling for more money. Examining the expansion of the school choice and local control policies that had student achievemen­t trending upward before COVID-19 would be an excellent place to start.

 ?? PHOTO BY AXEL KOESTER ?? Los Angeles Unified Superinten­dent Alberto M. Carvalho and California State Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n Tony Thurmond tour a Universal Transition­al Kindergart­en class.
PHOTO BY AXEL KOESTER Los Angeles Unified Superinten­dent Alberto M. Carvalho and California State Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n Tony Thurmond tour a Universal Transition­al Kindergart­en class.

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