THE
STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
/ THE
UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234 |
TO: |
The Honorable the Members of the Board of Regents |
FROM: |
James A. Kadamus |
COMMITTEE: |
Subcommittee on State Aid |
TITLE OF
ITEM: |
Update on Education Finance Research Consortium and Development of Regents State Aid Proposal for 2005-06 |
DATE OF
SUBMISSION: |
May 28, 2004 |
PROPOSED
HANDLING: |
Discussion |
RATIONALE FOR
ITEM: |
Policy Development |
STRATEGIC
GOAL: |
Goals 2 and 5 |
AUTHORIZATION(S): |
|
SUMMARY:
At your June meeting, I recommend two topics for discussion:
1. Professor Jim Wyckoff will provide an update on the Education Finance Research Consortium, including a synthesis of findings from the 2004 Symposium on School Finance and Organizational Structure. See Attachment A.
2. Staff will initiate a discussion to reaffirm goals for the 2005-06 Regents proposal. This proposal represents the second year in a seven-year proposal. See Attachment B.
Attachment C provides a schedule of reports for developing next year’s proposal as. It will be updated and provided each month to help keep track of progress and plans.
Attachments
Attachment A
Abstract Symposium on
Education Finance and Organizational Structure in New York State Public
Schools: A Synthesis David Monk and Jim Wyckoff, Symposium
Co-chairs The Education Finance Research Consortium, with support from the Wallace Foundation, convened a research symposium on Education Finance and Organizational Structure in New York Public Schools. The symposium addressed four interrelated components of providing New York’s school children with an opportunity for an adequate education: education finance, the teaching workforce, organizational structure and incentives, and data management. Researchers participating in the symposium were selected for their expertise in these areas and represented a broad array of backgrounds and perspectives. Public presentation of the symposium policy briefs was March 5, 2004 in Albany. A list of the authors and their policy briefs is attached. Background The symposium was conceived against the backdrop of three important events:
These developments all prompt important questions about how New York State should develop school finance, organizational structure, incentive and accountability systems to most effectively meet the challenges of an outcomes-based approach to education and discharge its responsibilities to provide an adequate education to students throughout the State. The symposium was designed to bring evidence and ideas on these topics. This is a broad mandate. We believe it is important to focus our attention on the questions and policies crucial to improving outcomes for New York’s lowest performing students. It turns out the lowest performing students are concentrated in relatively few schools, located in a handful of districts, as Boyd, Lankford and Loeb document in their policy brief. For example, 70 percent of students scoring at Level 1 on the 2002 fourth grade math exam are located in 20 percent of the schools (see Figure 1). Seventy-five percent of these 480 elementary schools are in New York City and 14 percent are in the other Big Four cities. The problem of very poor student academic performance in New York is overwhelmingly an urban problem and disproportionately a New York City problem. It is also important to recognize that even though almost all of the low performing schools are in urban districts, fewer than half of all urban schools are in this lowest performing group. What do we learn from the policy briefs that would improve educational outcomes for New York’s lowest performing students? We briefly summarize some of these lessons from each of the four components of the symposium. Educational
Finance
Teacher Workforce
Incentives and Organizational
Structure
Data Management
Taken together these observations provide useful insights for policy. They also highlight some longstanding dilemmas. Several of the authors indicate the importance of differences between schools within large districts. Others recognize the difficulty of defining problems so narrowly that resource disparities make equitable solutions difficult. New York State has often focused on the district as the unit of financial accountability, but increasingly the school is the unit of performance accountability. Is this a misalignment that increases the difficulty of increasing student performance? If so, how can it be resolved? The other tension that exists in some of the policy briefs is that between affording local administrators the discretion and authority to determine how to address performance problems and the value of having the State apply a common set of requirements and policies across all districts. For example, everyone recognizes the importance of increasing the quality of teaching, especially in low-performing schools. Should superintendents and principals have the discretion to implement policies that take account of the local environment and only be held accountable for the student performance outcomes? Alternatively, should the State impose uniform education and certification requirements? The right balance of organizational structure and incentives remains an important issue.
Neither of these questions is resolved in the policy briefs, but they do highlight some important decisions that policy makers should consider regarding education finance and accountability. Finally, data collection, management and dissemination can play an important role in facilitating improved student performance. These are topics where we believe more research is needed. Figure 1 Concentration of Students Scoring at
Level 1 on 4th Grade Math Exam (Schools ordering
based on number of Level 1 students.)
Symposium on Education Finance and
Organizational Structure in New York State Public Schools Educational Finance
Panel Thomas Downes, Tufts University. “What Is Adequate? Operationalizing the Concept of Adequacy for New York.”
Jon Sonstelie, University of California – Santa Barbara. “Financing Adequate Resources for New York Public Schools.”
Leanna Stiefel, Amy Schwartz, New York University & Ross Rubenstein, Syracuse University. “From Districts to Schools: The Distribution of Resources Across Schools in Big City School Districts.”
Teaching Workforce
Panel Donald Boyd, Hamilton Lankford, University at Albany, and Susanna Loeb, Stanford University. “Improving Student Outcomes: The Role of Teacher Workforce Policies.”
Dale Ballou, Vanderbilt University. “Improving the Teaching Workforce in New York Urban Schools.”
Organizational Structure
Panel Helen F. Ladd, Duke University. “Lessons from North Carolina's School Based Accountability Program.”
Jim Spillane, Northwestern University. “Policy in Practice: Where the Rubber Meets the Road.”
Data Management
Panel Sharon S. Dawes and Tony Cresswell, University at Albany. “The Information Dimension of Education Financing Decisions: Data Needs, Users, Strategies, and Systems.”
Richard Murnane and Nancy Sharkey, Harvard University. “Learning from Student Assessment Results: Opportunities and Obstacles.”
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Attachment B |
Regents Goal and Principles
Discussion Materials
for the
Regents 2005-06 Proposal on
State Aid to School Districts
State Aid Work Group
New York State Education Department
June 2004
The Context
In December 2003, the Regents recommended that the State implement a new, multi-year approach to State and local funding of public schools designed to close the student achievement gap. They proposed that 29 aids be consolidated into one foundation formula, distributed based on the cost of education, pupil needs, regional cost differences and an expected local contribution. They recommended a seven-year period to phase into the new system with limits in losses and gains during this time.
Each year, the Regents have documented in their annual report to the Legislature and Governor the strong relationship between student achievement and educational need. The State Aid Work Group has further documented a relationship between spending, achievement and need. As a result, the Regents focus has been to align resources to close the achievement gap in order to ensure that all students have the resources to meet State learning standards.
The State’s highest court has required New York State to revise its school funding system by July 30, 2004 so that all students in New York City will receive the meaningful high school education to which the State’s Constitution entitles them. At the time of this report, the State has not responded, although proposals have been advanced. The balance of this report is a review of Regents goals and State Aid principles that underlie the Regents proposal, in order to reaffirm Regents priorities as we approach the second year of the Regents proposal. Legislative action will be presented to the Regents when it occurs and implications for the Regents proposal discussed at that time.
Regents Goal
The State's system of funding for education
should provide adequate resources through a State and local partnership so that
all students have the opportunity to achieve the State’s learning standards,
including resources for extra time and help for students.
State Aid Principles
Four principles underlie the Regents proposal and its overarching goal. They include:
Regents Discussion
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ATTACHMENT C | ||
Date |
Reports/Topics |
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May 2004 |
Special education funding Schedule of reports for developing the 2005-06 proposal |
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June 2004 |
Update on State budget (as available) Reaffirm proposal goals Education Finance Research Consortium: Synthesis of school finance symposium and update on Consortium |
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July 2004 |
Compressed meeting (no item on State Aid) |
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September 2004 |
Assessing Progress: Reviewing legislative action in comparison with proposals (Regents, CFE, Zarb, etc.) Proposal introduction or outline Primer presentation on State Aid |
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October 2004 |
Meeting of Education Finance Advisory Group |
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October 2004 |
Update on local effort in support of education Review proposal directions Report on focus forums on special education funding |
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November 2004 |
Meeting of Education Finance Advisory Group |
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November 2004 |
Review draft of conceptual proposal |
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December 2004 |
Action on final proposal with the dollar amount recommended and the overall distribution of aid |
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January 2005 – April 2005 |
Legislative advocacy |
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