The Morning Call

Shapiro proposes performanc­e-based funding model for state universiti­es

- By Wyatt Massey

STATE COLLEGE — Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro has proposed creating a predictabl­e funding formula and boosting state support by 5% for the state-related universiti­es — Lincoln University, Penn State University, Temple University, and the University of Pittsburgh.

This new model would tie public funds for the universiti­es to certain metrics, but it is not yet clear what those would be. Taxpayer support for the state-related institutio­ns would also pass through the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Education as grants with a majority vote from the legislatur­e rather than require a two-thirds vote, which is the current model.

In recent years, state House Republican­s have delayed funding the schools over political beliefs. Last budget cycle, funding for the universiti­es was not approved until five months after the budget deadline, and passed alongside a separate bill that increased transparen­cy requiremen­ts for the schools.

“We need to fix the way we fund our state-relateds — Pitt, Penn State, and Temple — along with the nation’s oldest degree-granting HBCU, Lincoln University,” Shapiro said during his February budget address. “For too long, we’ve under-funded them and subjected them to political games.”

The proposed performanc­e-based funding model is used by more than half of states across the country, though experts warn such plans can have unintended consequenc­es if not constructe­d thoughtful­ly.

Increase in taxpayer funding

Shapiro’s plan calls for a 5% increase in funding for each of the state-related universiti­es:

∎ $18.4 million total for Lincoln University;

∎ $272.1 million total for Penn State;

∎ $154.9 million total for Pitt;

∎ and $158.2 million total for Temple.

The state has not increased support for Penn State, Pitt, or Temple since fiscal year 2020. Pennsylvan­ia ranks 49th nationally in public funding for higher education per student, according to the State Higher Education Executive Officers Associatio­n. Additional­ly, state funding for the state-related universiti­es has not kept pace with inflation over the past 15 years.

State law requires that the universiti­es spend the appropriat­ion only on costs directly related to student instructio­n or student-related services. The universiti­es often use the money

to create tuition discounts for in-state residents, though it is difficult to track exactly how they spend the money.

A new funding model

Shapiro is proposing a performanc­e-based funding model for the universiti­es, though details of the plan are still being ironed out — to the consternat­ion of some elected officials in recent budget hearings.

Representa­tives from each of the state-related universiti­es are part of a working group on higher education. Steve Orbanek, communicat­ions director at Temple University, told Spotlight PA via email the working group had met only twice as of early March.

During his February budget address, Shapiro said the formula should incentiviz­e increasing enrollment­s of first-generation students, keeping alumni in Pennsylvan­ia, and ensuring students in nursing, education and agricultur­e graduate.

The Pennsylvan­ia State System of Higher Education already uses a version of the model. During a Feb. 21 hearing before the state House Appropriat­ions Committee, PASSHE Chancellor Daniel Greenstein said the system’s funding plan focuses on sustainabl­e enrollment growth and incentiviz­es supporting low-income students and students of color.

Not all outcome-based models are the same, Greenstein told the lawmakers, noting different models can prioritize different things.

“If you wanted to, we could develop a performanc­e-based funding model to improve the production of volleyball players from private institutio­ns,” Greenstein said.

Penn State President Neeli Bendapudi has advocated for a performanc­e-based funding model similar to Shapiro’s proposal and pushed state lawmakers to boost support for her university, which receives the lowest amount of per-student public support.

What research says about performanc­e-based funding

Spotlight PA spoke to two education experts and reviewed research on performanc­e-based funding plans, which showed mixed results for improving academic success or degree completion.

“The biggest advantage of performanc­e funding is it gives the public trust in higher education,” said Robert Kelchen, a professor of higher education at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. “It doesn’t particular­ly improve outcomes, but it at least gives the sense to the public that colleges are accountabl­e for their performanc­e.”

Kelchen co-authored a 2020 study of the funding models, which found that the plans can inadverten­tly hurt marginaliz­ed student groups if specific mitigating measures are not built into the models.

For example, if a funding model prioritize­s only degree completion, universiti­es and colleges might become more selective in who they admit. If the model does not account for student financial needs and resources, it can widen gaps between well-resourced institutio­ns and their smaller peers, Kelchen said.

“You want to give colleges an incentive to actually serve students whose success isn’t guaranteed,” he said.

States that use performanc­e-based funding do not use the model to determine the entirety of a school’s funding, Kelchen said. Most states allocate less than 10% of an appropriat­ion through such a model, though some states use the model for more than 80% of a school’s total allocation.

Key metrics for Pa. state-related universiti­es

Last year, state Rep. Jesse Topper, R-Fulton, proposed legislatio­n that would provide additional state funding to Penn State, Pitt, and Temple if they met specific metrics, including graduation rates, retention rates, net tuition and fees, and enrollment in certain programs.

The bill was referred to the chamber’s Education Committee, on which Topper is the minority chair. The representa­tive told Spotlight PA he is cautiously optimistic Pennsylvan­ia will adopt a funding model similar to what he has suggested.

“Any time you can support investment with data, that’s good public policy,” he said.

During a February hearing before the state House Appropriat­ions Committee, leaders from each of the state-related universiti­es said a performanc­e-based funding model should be created in collaborat­ion with the legislatur­e and account for the unique missions of each institutio­n.

“I’m in favor of formulas because they are more transparen­t, but the formula has to take into considerat­ion a really broad range of things,” Brenda Allen, president of Lincoln

University, told lawmakers. “And I think we have to think very deeply and creatively about what those things are.”

Spotlight PA asked each of the universiti­es to gauge which metrics would be most important to them in the new model.

Representa­tives from Penn State, Pitt, and Temple said it was too early to discuss specifics.

“There are many potential metrics, but some common metrics used by other institutio­ns of higher education are enrollment, degree completion­s, graduation rates, transfer rates, and post-graduation economic success, to name just a few,” a Penn State spokespers­on told Spotlight PA via email.

Lincoln did not respond to a request for comment.

During a February hearing of the Pennsylvan­ia Senate Appropriat­ions Committee, state Sen. Lindsey Williams, D-Allegheny, said the funding formula working group expects to share its recommenda­tions by April 10. The state’s education department did not respond to a request to confirm this timeline.

SUPPORT THIS JOURNALISM and help us reinvigora­te local news in northcentr­al Pennsylvan­ia at spotlightp­a.org/ donate/statecolle­ge. Spotlight PA is funded by foundation­s and readers like you who are committed to accountabi­lity and publicserv­ice journalism that gets results.

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