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Why Does It Cost So Much to Educate a Child in America?
PJ Media ^ | 08/13/2018 | Paula Bolyard

Posted on 08/13/2018 12:17:10 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

We've heard a lot recently about the I Promise School that LeBron James is helping to start in Akron, Ohio, and, in theory, it seems like a good idea: Gather up 240 at-risk students into a school that, in addition to academics, provides "wraparound" services like free breakfast and lunch and an extended school day and school year to keep kids off the streets.

The Akron Beacon Journal reports some staggering dollar amounts being poured into the school that will enroll 240 kids.

Contrary to some reporting, the LeBron James Family Foundation isn't footing the bill for all of the school's operating expenses. The foundation has donated $2 million thus far for start-up costs and has committed to another $2 million a year as the school builds to capacity. Because IPS will be part of the Akron City School District, a little over 14,000 in tax dollars will be allocated for each pupil enrolled in the school—the same as for students in every other school in the district. Add to that the millions in charity dollars that will be poured into the school every year and the cost of each child's education begins to skyrocket.

The chart below shows how education dollars are spent in each state. Note that less than half of school expenditures go to pay teacher salaries—and that gray "other" category comes out to around 28 percent of the total amount spent.

All of which begs the question: why does it cost so much to educate a child in the United States? Answer: It doesn't. Or at least it shouldn't.

My husband and I managed to homeschool children through high school for less than $1000 per year—for two kids, both of whom had learning disabilities. Some years we spent a lot less than that by buying used curriculum or utilizing our public library or free online resources. When our kids were in middle school, a bunch of homeschooling families we knew started a co-op that met once a week. Students completed their assignments at home and met for classes taught by parents who volunteered for teaching duties. Only a couple of the parents were trained teachers, but we somehow managed to provide a fabulous—and challenging—educational experience for our kids. As I recall, each family paid administrative expenses of about $50 per year and another $300 or so for books. Catholic schools educate children for around $5000 a year and many private Christian schools do it for even less than that.

I understand that public schools have a lot on their plate. They've got buildings to build, services to provide for special needs students, buses to maintain, outlays for extracurricular activities, drug tests, metal detectors, active shooter training, and, of course, sex ed, bullying, and other social engineering programs. Those things don't come cheap (as they'll tell you over and over again while they're picking your pocket to get a new school levy passed).

Just take a look at this chart from the National Center for Education Statistics showing the armies of support staff schools are carrying in their budgets:



Let's say you wanted to go out and start a school and you had 30 students ready to enroll on the first day of classes. And say you were given $14,000 per student, so you'd have $420,000 to play around with. You could go for broke and pay a highly qualified teacher a $100,000 salary, spend $1000 per student on books, and still have almost $300,000 left to pay for building expenses or whatever.

You could probably run a pretty good school, don't you think?

Ah, but then say the state showed up at your door and said you are required to hire a counselor, a nurse, a social worker, a psychologist, an ESL/bilingual teacher, and a cadre of classroom aides. Even if you were able to hire all those people on your budget, that wouldn't be the end of it. The state would come around again to bill you for various "other" expenses, gobbling up more than one-fourth of your budget. Suddenly you're broke and your school is relegated to the ash heap of history, despite your best intentions.

And therein lies the problem. Teacher salaries and benefits make up less than half of a school's budget; the rest is spent on "pupil services" and administrative costs (that vast gray area on the chart above). State and federal mandates, many of them bureaucratic in nature, cripple school budgets, leaving less money and less time for the business of educating children. Is it any wonder today's students are widely regarded to be dumber than previous generations? As schools increasingly take on the role that families were designed to play and become social services hubs, the focus becomes less about education and more about shaping society—with devastating results.

And lest you think that pouring more money into schools will improve outcomes, this chart from Cato Institute should disabuse you of that fanciful notion:



Back in the halcyon days of the early '70s, I attended K-6 elementary school in a dilapidated brick schoolhouse in Bedford, Ohio. There were two classes for every grade, with 30 students in each class most years. My kindergarten teacher, Mrs. Liptak, bless her heart, taught both morning and afternoon kindergarten, so she was responsible for 60 children. The main part of the building was built in 1905, so by the time I arrived at Central Elementary School in 1969 the school's best days were behind it. Compared to today's modern schools that resemble a cross between a prison and a recreation center, the school was a dump. The building had drafty old windows and we entered and exited the upper floors of the school via rusty iron fire escapes that shook and wobbled when we scampered down them during recess. There was no technology to speak of, unless you want to include the filmstrips we watched in the school's bomb shelter two or three times a year.




View from the Central Elementary School fire escape in Bedford, Ohio, in 1978.

Kids at the school came, almost without exception, from two-parent homes; many of them (including mine) were second-generation immigrant families. What the teacher said, went. If you got in trouble at school you were in even more trouble at home. If the teacher told your parents you were a brat, the parents believed the teacher. Spankings were not unheard of (especially once we got to middle school, where almost every student in the school was "boarded" at one time or another -- certainly most of the boys).

Somehow, we all got a good education. I dare say you could have dropped a few million dollars a year into the school's budget and we would not have been better educated.

Lack of money is not the problem with schools today. You could double or even triple school expenditures and, data shows, it would not improve performance. Most of the money would end up falling down those black holes called administrative services or it would be used to expand social engineering initiatives or after school babysitting services.

The dirty little secret that no one ever wants to acknowledge is that it costs next to nothing to provide a child with a quality basic education—reading, writing, and 'rithmetic. (I think I paid $150 for a curriculum to teach my boys to read, but I could have easily done it with library books.) It's once you begin adding in the extras—like social services, ESL tutors, drug testing, tablets for every student, and an army of bureaucrats—that costs begin to skyrocket. (And don't get me started on kindergarten teachers being required to get Master's degrees in order to teach five-year-olds to read. This ain't rocket science, folks.)

Ultimately, if we want to improve the quality of education we need to advocate for less rather than more. Spend less, provide fewer amenities, return to teaching the basics and the quality of education will improve. Continuing to pour money into top-down, dysfunctional education monopolies will continue to result in poor outcomes. Removing the role of the federal government from education would be a good place to begin—that should be a no-brainer. The feds have been calling the shots since the 1970s and by every measurable data point the experiment has been an utter failure.

I hope LeBron's school succeeds. If nothing else, the school's extensive wraparound services will fill the gaps where parents are neglecting their responsibilities. And perhaps a parade of motivational speakers led by LeBron can encourage kids to work hard and climb out of poverty. But let's not fool ourselves: the public schools cannot be—and were never meant to be— an adequate substitute for a child's parents — and the moral character of our country cannot be fixed by writing a check.



TOPICS: Education; Society
KEYWORDS: education; qanonhateskids
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To: SeekAndFind

Government interference. Plus, those who aren’t decent teachers get their principal and superintendent papers and get out of the class-room ASAP. Then, they proceed to fail at that as well.


21 posted on 08/13/2018 1:09:03 PM PDT by Parmy
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To: SeekAndFind

I live in Florida and school districts are by county.

This means the school districts are large and fixed administrative expenses can be spread out over large numbers of students to keep costs down.


22 posted on 08/13/2018 1:09:06 PM PDT by Brian Griffin
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To: Brian Griffin

Where I live school districts are small, and jealously guard their turf.

Some spend money like drunken sailors, often on lavish athletic facilities. Property taxes in those districts are typically 9000+ per year. Sometimes they adjoin districts that don’t have two pots to rub together.

One district does not provide any student busing because state law would require them to also provide transportation for Catholic school students. They’d rather make everyone drive their kids than help a Catholic school.


23 posted on 08/13/2018 1:15:53 PM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: SeekAndFind

OPM...other people’s money being spent by academicians...


24 posted on 08/13/2018 1:18:58 PM PDT by shotgun ( .)
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To: marktwain

There’s a lot of desert between Riverside, CA and Phoenix, AZ.

If you live in the Poconos and are a teacher, you might commute to New Jersey or New York State to get an extra $20K/year. So Pocono school districts have to pay more. And Scranton has to pay more. And so does Hazleton. And so does Harrisburg.

Riverside is just too far away from Phoenix for a tolerable commute.


25 posted on 08/13/2018 1:21:10 PM PDT by Brian Griffin
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To: Buckeye McFrog

“Some spend money like drunken sailors, often on lavish athletic facilities.”

Think of what Texas could educate students for without the football stadiums.


26 posted on 08/13/2018 1:23:30 PM PDT by Brian Griffin
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To: Brian Griffin

There is no limit on the number of teachers that can live in the Poconos. Both New York and Pennsylvania teachers could live there.


27 posted on 08/13/2018 1:24:59 PM PDT by marktwain (President Trump and his supporters are the Resistance. His opponents are the Reactionaries.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Why do people pay their enemies to teach their kids—never did get that...


28 posted on 08/13/2018 1:25:28 PM PDT by cgbg (Hidden behind the social justice warrior mask is corruption and sexual deviance.)
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To: SeekAndFind
1. Unions
2. Regulations
3. Lack of choice/competition
29 posted on 08/13/2018 1:43:43 PM PDT by Blurb2350
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To: SeekAndFind; All

Why does the Pentagon pay $400 for a toilet seat?

Because of bad, post-17th Amendment ratification trade deals for the last 70+ years, working parents are probably too tired at the end of the day to concern themselves with what alleged bribed school administrators are paying for school supplies.


30 posted on 08/13/2018 1:43:57 PM PDT by Amendment10
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To: SeekAndFind
Because ever-increasing government intervention at every level has grown the worthless, self-serving bureaucracies by orders of magnitude.

Next question...

31 posted on 08/13/2018 1:48:20 PM PDT by Joe Brower (Those with intellect bear the burden of thought.)
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To: SeekAndFind

To be fair homeschooling is only vastly cheaper if you don’t count what the teacher (mom) would make if she had a 9-5 job. This can very greatly but lets say (based on skills and education) This is from 30 to 100k. That means if you have between 1 and 4 kids your actual costs are between 7.5k per kid and 100k per kid. That is a pretty wide range.

But still, only counting the cost of books for homeschoolers isn’t exactly fair.

Yes we homeschool and with ‘lost wages’ it costs us way more per kid than this article claims.


32 posted on 08/13/2018 1:54:01 PM PDT by TalonDJ
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To: SeekAndFind

Because it takes a lot of money and time for propaganda to get permanently established in the young brain.


33 posted on 08/13/2018 1:55:05 PM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom
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To: Amendment10

“Why does the Pentagon pay $400 for a toilet seat?”

With the toilet seat you get comprehensive documentation that it will do its designed function (and if it is going on a plane that documentation is not cheap). Public schools don’t offer nearly the same guarantees.


34 posted on 08/13/2018 1:55:19 PM PDT by TalonDJ
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To: SeekAndFind

Unions, in both direct costs and the costs of poor pedagogy, bureaucracy, and the special ed industrial complex are the three big costs.


35 posted on 08/13/2018 2:01:46 PM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: SeekAndFind

there is one thing that is not being discussed here.

In the days gone by, regular kids went to regular school.

Bad and hard to handle kids went to training school and boarded.

Or they dropped out and went to work.

Mentally and physically handicapped kids went to special schools or lived in centers for their disabilities.


36 posted on 08/13/2018 2:20:22 PM PDT by Chickensoup (Leftists today are speaking as if they plan to commence to commit genocide against conservatives.)
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To: Brian Griffin

“Smaller class sizes” translates into “fewer students per teacher”, which correlates to “more teachers per student”.

And, of course, with more teachers, they’ll want more Deputy Junior Assistant Vice-Principals, which leads to more Junior Assistant Vice-Principals, which leads to more Assistant Vice-Principals, and so on...


37 posted on 08/13/2018 2:39:30 PM PDT by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: SeekAndFind

A better question would be “Why does it cost SO MUCH to NOT educate a child in America?” To say that we are educating anyone via our educational system is a stretch.


38 posted on 08/13/2018 2:43:26 PM PDT by upsdriver
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To: SeekAndFind
The school, which is public and part of Akron Public Schools, is costing the district nearly $2.9 million from its general fund to cover the cost of most salaries, benefits, supplies and other base elements of the school.

Oh, so this wan't anything but shameless showboating by leebron. Figures...

39 posted on 08/13/2018 3:05:51 PM PDT by rockrr ( Everything is different now...)
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To: marktwain
Catholic schools educate children for around $5000 a year and many private Christian schools do it for even less than that.

IOW, more than $1500 less than Utah which runs the most efficient public school system in the nation.

Why do you suppose that it?

40 posted on 08/13/2018 3:25:57 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (ObaMao: Fake America, Fake Messiah, Fake Black man. How many fakes can you fit into one Zer0?)
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